Abstract
Some distinctive features of Islamic banking are reaffirmed: A close linkage between real economy and finance obviously holds in sharing based modes but also remains in case of fixed return Islamic modes of finance based on murabaha, etc. Islamic finance can meet all the transaction needs of the market. It does so more efficiently than conventional finance as it focuses on productivity of the project rather than creditworthiness of the borrower. By synchronizing entrepreneurs payment obligations with revenue accrual, Islamic finance reduces instability in the financial market. Islamic banking is just whereas conventional banking is biased in favour of capital owners.
The paper notes that wild exchange rate fluctuations hurt the small and weak developing countries, hence the need for regulation according to rules framed and enforced by an international agency under the UN system. Though the prohibition of interest goes a long way in curing the ills of contemporary finance, much more is to be done to arrive at a safer, saner world insofar as money and finance is concerned.
Islamic economics sees man caring for others along with focusing on self-interest. The Islamic institution of waqf is a witness to the reality of individual behaviour with a social purpose. Morally inspired economic behaviour is well recorded today as well as widely reported from the past. Broadening the scope of such action is the need of the hour
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Mr. Chairman, Ladies and Gentlemen
I am thankful to Harvard Islamic Finance Information Program for inviting me to be with you this morning. I also appreciate the special interest Directors Thomas Mullins and S. Nazim Ali took in this regard.
Time is precious and holding the attention of this gathering of luminaries and eminent scholars for long would be difficult, so I wish to share with you some thoughts on two issues before concluding with some observations relating to Islamic Economics. Firstly, a reaffirmation of some distinctive features of Islamic banking and finance which can contribute to human felicity. And secondly, there are some worrisome aspects of modern finance, especially global finance, which call for attention.
Distinctive Features of Islamic Finance
Islamic finance ensures a closer linkage between real economy and finance, the former dictating and the latter following. The linkage is obvious in sharing based modes of investment and financial services. When two parties, the financier and the entrepreneur,agree that an opportunity for creating additional value exists, they come together to realize the gain and share it. Since economic activities are, by definition, value creating activities, sharing as a basis of finance is inconceivable without economic activity. In the uncertain world in which these activities have to be conducted, they do sometimes fail to create additional value. There is nothing to share. Sometimes part of the existing wealth may be destroyed the losses borne by capital, the entrepreneurial efforts gone unrewarded.
This linkage between real economic activity directed towards creation of additional wealth and financial transactions continues in case of non-sharing Islamic modes of finance such as murabaha (cost-plus), salam and istisna (prepaid orders) and ijara (leasing). These deals, which are being used by contemporary Islamic banks to secure predetermined returns on their investments are possible only when some real economic activity is involved. There have to be some goods and services to be objects of murabaha, salam, istisna and ijara. The demand and supply of these goods and services whose exchange is financed through the above mentioned contracts ensures that financial activity is the servant not the master of real economic activity.
Prohibition of interest has closed the door on exchange of more money for less money, even when a period of time intervenes. Stratagems (Hiyal) securing the same goal by bringing in a commodity in a nominal way e.g. ina, tawarruq or bai?al wafa are rejected as impermissible.
There remains the gray area of exchange between different moneys, i.e. selling one currency for another. Islamic economic research in this area has yet to catch up with the times. I do not have any opinions to pronounce save noting that it is a necessary economic activity facilitating exchange of goods and services across borders. Fear of making financial transactions "profitable" without there being any link whatsoever with exchange of real goods and services makes many Muslim scholars opt for the strictest interpretation of the relevant rules. But that carries the danger of restricting what may be really necessary. The challenge of finding the golden mean remains.
Viability of Islamic Finance
It has been demonstrated that all market activities can be financed by using the various Islamic modes, e.g., musharaka, mudaraba, murabaha, salam, istisna and ijara. No stratagems are needed. Financing consumption needs which fall outside the market (there being no prospective income to pay from out of) requires humanitarian solutions in the voluntary cooperative sector or under a state sponsored safety net. Financing government deficits has also been shown to be quite feasible[1]. How far it is desirable to run deficits, how long and what for, are however issues far beyond the scope of "finance".
We have been arguing that interest free Islamic modes of finance can replace the conventional interest based finance with certain added advantages. By synchronizing entrepreneurial payment obligations and accrual of revenues, sharing based modes of finance remove a major source of instability from freely functioning markets[2]. Also by linking financial intermediaries' returns to the actual revenue of the fund users, allocation of investable funds is redirected to projects expected to produce more value than their alternatives.
Even though the predominance of non-sharing modes of finance in the current practice of Islamic banking dilutes these advantages, the Islamic system would score far better than any system that permits exchange of more money for less money. Part of the reason is the vast opportunities of exchange that this permission opens bypassing the real economy which is focussed on exchange of goods and services with one another, money serving as a means of such exchange. Exchange of money for money degenerates into a game of chance in which people indulge to try their luck, little benefit flowing to the production of goods and services which exchange is supposed to promote. Prohibition of interest is directed at restoring money to its essential functions which certainly do not include a means for gambling.
Beyond Interest Free Economy
We now turn to the worrisome aspects of contemporary financial markets. As already noted, prohibition of interest would go a long way in improving the situation. You exchange money either for goods and services, or for money or for debt. In the Islamic framework we have no problems with the first, the second, exchange of money for money is severely constrained, and the third is almost eliminated. Islamic law allows cash for debt only at par[3], which leaves no room for a ?market? in which debt could be sold for cash. It also allows exchange of debt for debt at par and with further restrictions. Again the possibility of a marke? for debt is slender. There would, of course, be a market for common stock, ijara (lease) certificate[4], and financial papers based on salam or istisna[5]. But, despite their presence, the scope for speculation in an Islamic framework would be far less than witnessed at the present.
The disturbing features of contemporary finance which would remain unaffected by the prohibition of interest, restrains on the money market and the demise of the market for debt, are the following.
- The possibility of massive capital movements into and out of a country which has destabilizing effects, especially for small economies.
- Wide exchange rate fluctuation, to the great disadvantage of small developing countries dependent on foreign trade.
- Social, cultural and political aspects of financial globalization and multinational corporations dominating the market. This is especially worrisome to developing countries in Africa and Asia which do not share the socio-cultural background of the regions where the MNCs are based. These countries also lack sophisticated bureaucracies, mature politicians and efficient media, which could be a guard against the possible undesirable role of MNCs.
We now take up these issues one by one. In an Islamic framework the influx of foreign capital in a country would hardly be in the form of loans as they would earn no returns. Foreign capital would come either in partnership with local capital and / or enterprise, in which case it would commit itself for medium or long run, or as price paid for common stock, in which case it would be short term. It could also come through a murabaha contract in which case the date for its possible exit with returns is determined from now. Capital invested in financial papers based on ijara, salam or istisna can, however, make an exit at will. In sum, we have two kinds of foreign capital, the long term partnership and murabaha based capital which is subject to a predetermined schedule so far as its withdrawal is concerned, and the short term capital invested in the market for common stock and other financial papers. It is the second kind which calls for attention as it can leave the country at will. The usual solution is to impose some kind of discipline so that the destabilizing effects of withdrawals of foreign capital are minimized.
Some kind of regulation is necessary. Several ideas, including those of James Tobin[6] are relevant The crucial thing, however, is to shift the focus from ad hoc individual initiatives and policies to some kind of international understanding. There is a need for an international agency, may be part of the UN system, to be set up to engineer the needed regulation and protect the small and the weak from actions emanating from profit-driven investment decisions (and speculation) oblivious of the social political and ethical dimensions of such decisions. The conscience of the world community must take charge where the market fails to give due weight to mankind's larger interests (i.e. interest other than enrichment of capital owners).
The post World War II fixed exchange rate regime collapsed in 1971 because of the inability of the United States of America to continue honoring its commitment to a certain gold value of the dollar. A return to gold standard now seems neither feasible nor desirable. But the type of exchange rate fluctuations experienced by South East Asian economies in 1997-98 is simply a killer. It demonstrated for all, not only the dangers of freely floating exchange rates, but much more that needs correction, so succinctly indicated in the following quote from the Human Development Report 1999.
"When the market goes too far in dominating social and political outcomes, the opportunities and rewards of globalization spread unequally and inequitably concentrating power and wealth in a select group of people, nations and corporations, marginalizing the others. When the market gets out of hand, the instabilities show up in boom and bust economies as in the financial crisis in East Asia and its worldwide repercussions, cutting global output by an estimated $ 2 trillion in 1998 - 2000. When the profit motives of market players get out of hand, they challenge peoples ethics and sacrifice respect for justice and human rights"[7].
Some degree of exchange rate stability must be ensured if the small and the weak have to coexist on planet earth with the big and the strong as they must. It is generally recognized that this necessitates some regulation of capital flows, but the timing and modalities of such regulation are not clear. In the absence of an agency especially designed for this purposed, most favour IMF World Bank to take up this role.
If taken up in earnest there is a need to set limits within which only supply and demand are allowed to determine exchange rates. That in its turn calls for manipulating supply or demand, as the case may be, when needed. Only an agency with almost unlimited resources (in respective currencies) can play this role (of the lender of last resort). Does this mean the power to create money? May be yes.
It can now be seen how difficult it would be for the IMF World bank under their current constitutions to take up this task. A new international understanding is necessary.
The clock of global finance can not be turned back. It need not be. It is good even for small developing countries that international financial giants' banks, mutual funds, investment companies can find it profitable to pour in resources to exploit the vast opportunities for wealth creation these countries in Africa and Asia offer. But there are some problems, psychological, cultural and political.
Smart briefcase holding (mostly Western) representatives of the MNCs, stepping out of five star hotels remind onlookers of the colonial days. How to change that perception? Employing local boys helps. Broadening the vision of MNCs to include the social dimension in their profit making activities will help more[8].
This goes hand in hand with encouraging tourism and helping local entrepreneurs to invest in developing resorts which could attract foreign tourists and earn hard currencies. Add dish antennas, casinos and night clubs and you have a scenario ripe for breeding misgivings leading to anger among the natives. They visualize a cultural onslaught and feel being targeted with hegemonistic designs of the western culture and fear losing their age old traditions.
Sovereign states are supposed to take care of themselves. Those who feel the need enter into alliances for defending their boundaries, even enlist foreign cooperation in maintaining internal security. Vulnerability to the manipulations of MNCs and financial giants is however a new kind of danger, which the traditional modes of defense fail to handle. Primitive administrative structures, inexperienced political elite, largely illiterate electorate that is not a position very helpful in dealing with the new danger. Protection is needed which can come only in the form of counseling and, if needed, intervention, by some international agency, preferably working under the UN system.
I offer these observations with two ends in view.
Firstly, to reassure all concerned that the Islamic economists share the anxiety justifiably caused by the current happenings in the financial markets in particular and in the economic aspect of living in general. We are with you in search of a better way for managing our affairs.
Secondly, to shake out of their naivety those sympathizers of Islamic economics who might presume that abolition of interest takes care of all the current problems in financeand economics. There is a need to go beyond that necessary but not sufficient step in an Islamic reconstruction of man's economy.
Premises and Promises of Islamic Economics
More than any thing else, Islamic banking and finance, a sub-culture of Islamic economics, has been a quest for justice and morality into the ordinary business of life. Justice and Morality cannot, however, be all encapsulated into laws and regulations, especially when it comes to protecting the small and weak form the big and strong. Some behavioral changes are called for. Justice and morality have to penetrate the behaviour of all economic agents, including the decision makers at the national and international level, so that all can live together in peace and harmony. Has Islamic Economics something to offer in making this possible?
At the heart of the Islamic economic culture lies care for others as a force tempering man's innate selfishness. In sharp contrast to neoclassical economics, which dominated the scene during the twentieth century, Islamic economics brings the social dimension of living into focus, thus downsizing individualism. It also recognizes morality as a potential motor of action and overseer of self interest. The former, the social dimension, is compulsory, economic analysis can ignore it only to its peril. The latter, ethical action, is a potentiality in the realization of which civilizations have had different records. But no human society has been devoid of the moral dimension. So ignoring it can never be justified.
As regards Islamic economics the moral dimension is its raison d'etre. As the literature shows, the last fifty years have shown several attempts to analyze morally informed human behaviour in production, consumption and exchange[9].
Nothing captures the distinguishing features of Islamic economics noted above i.e. a care for others, as does the institution of waqf (charitable endowments). Unlike the Zakat levy and the prohibition of interest, there is no legal force behind waqf. No Muslim is under compulsion to create a waqf under any circumstances whatsoever. And yet this institution emerged right during the days of the Prophet, peace be unto him, and continued to grow through out Islamic History. This giving away of private property for social purposes must have had ripple effects on the economies in which it took place, but the phenomenon has yet to attract the attention of analysts as distinguished from historians.
The other pillar of capitalism, along with private property, is free enterprise. Here social and moral dimension shows up into priorities in production and consumption and self imposed limits on profit making. The literature of hisba[10] (accountability) partly captures this. As do the economic writing of Ibn Taimiya, al Ghazali, Muhammad Ibn al Hasan al Shayhani and Abu Yusuf ? in the reverse chronological order[11]. Recent attempts to study Muslim economic agents under influence of Islamic norms and values have been very few[12], reflecting the continued domination of neoclassical economics. But we do have enough evidence on the reality of ethical economic behavior in the contemporary societies in East and West to justify attempts to broaden its scope and capture new areas. That is the need of the hour
End Notes:
[1] Monzer Kahf, Instruments of Meeting Budget Deficit in Islamic Economy, Jeddah, Islamic Development Bank, Islamic Research and Training Institute, Research Paper No. 42, 1997.
[2] Salim U. Chishti, ?Relative Stability of Interest Free Economy? Journal of Research in Islamic Economcis (Jeddah), Vol. 3, No. 1, pp. 3-12 (1985) and M.A. Zarqa, ?Stability in an Interest-Free Islamic Economy? in Pakistan Journal of Applied Economics (Karachi) Winter, 1983, pp. 181-88. Also Mohsin S. Khan, "Islamic Interest-Free Banking: A Theoretical Analysis", IMF Staff Papers, March 1986, Vol. 33, No. 1.
[3] Muhammad Taqi Usmani, An Introduction to Islamic Finance, Karachi, Idaratul Ma?arif, 1998, pp. 216-18.
[4] Ausaf Ahmad and Tariqullah Khan (editors), Islamic Financial Instruments for Public Sector Resource Mobilization, Jeddah, Islamic Development Bank, Islamic Research and Training Institute, Seminar Papers No. 39, 1997, See Chapters 5 to 10.
[5] Ibid, Chapters 6 and 7.
[6] James Tobin, "Financial Globalization: Can National Currencies Survive?" in Annual World Bank Conference On Development Economics, 1998, Washington DC., The World Bank, 1999, pp. 63-75.
[7] The United Nation Development Program, Human Development Report 1999, Oxford University Press, New Delhi, 1999, p. 2.
[8] "Multinational corporations influence the lives and welfare of billions of people, yet their accountability is limited to their share holders, with their influence on national and international policy kept behind the scenes. If they were brought into the structure of global governance their position would become more transparent and their social responsibility subject to greater public accountability". Human Development Report 1999, Oxford University Press, New Delhi, 1999, p. 12.
[9] See for example. M. Fahim Khan, Essays in Islamic Economics, Leicester, The Islamic Foundation, 1995; Ausaf Ahmad and Kazim Raza Awan (Eds.) Lectures on Islamic Economics, Jeddah, Islamic Development Bank, Islamic Research and Training Institute, 1992; Tahir, Ghazali and Agil, Readings in Micro-economics: An Islamic Perspective, Kuala Lumpur, Longman, Malaysia, 1992; and S.N.H. Naqvi, "The Dimensions of an Islamic Model" in Islamic Economic Studies (Jeddah), Vol. 4, No. 2, May 1997, pp. 1-24.
[10] Nicloa Ziadeh, al Hisbah and al Muhtasib in Islam. Old texts Collected and Edited with an Introduction. Beriut, Catholic Press, 1962.
[11] M.N. Siddiqi, Recent Works on the History of Economic Thought in Islam, Jeddah, International Centre for Research in Islamic Economics, 1982. Also M.N. Siddiqi and S.M. Ghazanfar, "Early Medieval Arab-Islamic Economic Thought. Abu Yusuf?s Economics" in a forthcoming issue of History of Political Economy. Also S.M. Ghazanfar and A.A. Islahi, Economic Thought of al Ghazali, Jeddah, Centre for Research in Islamic Economics, 1998; and A.A. Islahi, Economic Concepts of Ibn Taimiya, Leicester, The Islamic Foundation, 1988.
[12] Ahmad A. El Ashkar, On the Islamic Theory of Economic Behaviour. An Empirical Study in a Non Muslim Country, Durham, Centre for Middle Eastern and Islamic Studies, University of Durham, 1986.
Also by the same author, Islamic Business Enterprise, London, Croom Helm, 1987.
4. Alan Lewis and Karl Erik Warneryd (eds.), Ethics and Economic Affairs, London & New York, Routledge, 1994.
Zester M. Salmon, Helmut K. Anheir and Associates ?The Emerging Sector Revisited? Johns Hopkins University Institute for Policy Studies, 1998 (Reported in the Economist, 14 November, 1998).
Stefano Zamagani (ed.), The Economics of Altruism, An Elgar Reference Collection, 1995.
Oded Stark, Allruism and Beyond, An Economic Analysis of Transfers and Exchange within Families and Groups, Cambridge University Press, 1995.
Jane Mansbridge (ed.), Beyond Self Interest, Chicago, The University of Chicago Press, 1990.
On the theoretical side, see John P. Powelson, The Moral Economy, The University of Michigan Press, 1998.
© 2000 Muhammad Nejatullah Siddiqi
Mohammad Nejatullah Siddiqi is a Professor at the Centre for Research in Islamic Economics, King Abdulaziz University, Jeddah, Saudi Arabia. mnsiddiqi@hotmail.com
Presented at
Harvard University Forum on Islamic Finance
Cambridge, Mass. USA
October 1 & 2, 1999
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