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Islamic Economics
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Islamic
economical jurisprudence:
From Wikipedia
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Islamic Economics
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History
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For centuries Muslims
have developed ways to integrate their
religious beliefs with the external
economic realities of the nations they
live in. This has had varying degrees
of compatibility with the empires and
customs they encountered. Like most
things in Islam, commerce adapts to
al-urf, "the custom".
In the
1980s and
1990s Muslim bankers and religious
leaders developed ways to integrate
Islamic law on usage of money with modern
concepts of
ethical
investing. Consequently, a sophisticated
economic discipline has emerged with
its own concepts, analytical tools and
institutions. Some of these are revived
traditional
micro venture capital and
ethical investing frameworks that
thrived in medieval times. However,
they incorporated many modern techniques
and technologies. Some consider the
emergence of these economic practices
to be part of a revival of Islam and
an
Islamization of knowledge. Others
see them as a practical response to
problems of
global debt and
debt slavery. A number of researchers
suggest, however, the underlying causes
of the genesis of modern Islamic economics
was based more on the desire to reflect
beliefs about Islamic identity than
to establish a more ethical or religiously
sound banking system.
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Source and
Copy Right Information:
Wikipedia
information about Islamic economical
jurisprudence. This article
is licensed under the
GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
Wikipedia article "Islamic economical
jurisprudence".
More
from
Wikipedia
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Islamic Economics
|
|
History
|
For centuries Muslims
have developed ways to integrate their
religious beliefs with the external
economic realities of the nations they
live in. This has had varying degrees
of compatibility with the empires and
customs they encountered. Like most
things in Islam, commerce adapts to
al-urf, "the custom".
In the
1980s and
1990s Muslim bankers and religious
leaders developed ways to integrate
Islamic law on usage of money with modern
concepts of
ethical
investing. Consequently, a sophisticated
economic discipline has emerged with
its own concepts, analytical tools and
institutions. Some of these are revived
traditional
micro venture capital and
ethical investing frameworks that
thrived in medieval times. However,
they incorporated many modern techniques
and technologies. Some consider the
emergence of these economic practices
to be part of a revival of Islam and
an
Islamization of knowledge. Others
see them as a practical response to
problems of
global debt and
debt slavery. A number of researchers
suggest, however, the underlying causes
of the genesis of modern Islamic economics
was based more on the desire to reflect
beliefs about Islamic identity than
to establish a more ethical or religiously
sound banking system.
|
|
Source and
Copy Right Information:
Wikipedia
information about Islamic economical
jurisprudence. This article
is licensed under the
GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
Wikipedia article "Islamic economical
jurisprudence".
More
from
Wikipedia
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Islamic Economics
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History Reforms
under Islam |
Michael Bonner, Professor
of Medieval Islamic History at the University
of Michigan, writes on poverty and economics
in the Qur'an that the Qur'an provided
a blueprint for a new order in society,
in which the poor would be treated more
fairly than before. This "economy of
poverty" prevailed in Islamic theory
and practice until 13th and 14th century.
At its heart was a notion of property
circulated and purified, in part, through
charity, which illustrates a distinctively
Islamic way of conceptualizing charity,
generosity, and poverty markedly different
from "the Christian notion of perennial
reciprocity between rich and poor and
the ideal of charity as an expression
of community love." The Qur'an prohibits
bad kind of circulation (often understood
interest or
usury) and asks for good circulation
(zakat
[legal alms giving]). Some of the recipients
of charity appear only once in the Qur'an,
and others—such as orphans, parents,
and beggars—reappear constantly. Most
common is the triad of kinsfolk, poor,
and travelers. Unlike
pre-Islamic Arabian society, the
Qur'anic idea of economic circulation
as a return of goods and obligations
was for everyone, whether donors and
recipients know each other or not, in
which goods move, and society does what
it is supposed to do. The Qur'an's distinctive
set of economic and social arrangements,
in which poverty and the poor have important
roles, show signs of newness. The Qur'an
told that the guidance comes to a community
that regulates its flow of money and
goods in the right direction (from top
down) and practices generosity as reciprocation
for God's bounty. In a broad sense,
the narrative underlying the Qur'an
is that of a tribal society becoming
urbanized. Many scholars have characterized
both the Qur'an and Islam as highly
favorable to commerce and to the highly
mobile type of society that emerged
in the
medieval
Near East. Muslim tradition (both
hadith and
historiography) maintains that Muhammad
did not permit the construction of any
buildings in the market of Medina other
than mere tents; nor did he permit any
tax or rent to be taken there. This
expression of a "free market"—involving
the circulation of goods within a single
space without payment of fees, taxes,
or rent, without the construction of
permanent buildings, and without any
profiting on the part of the
caliphal authority (indeed, of the
Caliph himself )—was rooted in the
term
sadaqa, "voluntary alms." This coherent
and highly appealing view of the economic
universe had much to do with Islam's
early and lasting success. Since the
poor were at the heart of this economic
universe, the teachings of the Qur'an
on poverty had a considerable, even
a transforming effect in Arabia, the
Near East, and beyond.
[Read Main article:
Reforms under Islam (610-661)
]
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Source and
Copy Right Information:
Wikipedia
information about Islamic economical
jurisprudence. This article
is licensed under the
GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
Wikipedia article "Islamic economical
jurisprudence".
More
from
Wikipedia
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Islamic Economics
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History Reforms
under Islam |
Islamic economic institutions, not just
the Islamic bank but all those connected
with Islamic banking, claim to operate
on the basis of "zero interest." Critics
of Islamic economics argue, however,
that the fundamental characteristic
of charging interest (i.e. charging
a premium, on the principal amount of
a loan, for the time value of the loaned
money) is not truly eliminated in Islamic
banking, but rather the interest is
merely hidden and relabeled.
For example, consider the practical
reality of purchasing a vehicle from
an Islamic bank under an allegedly "zero
interest" loan. The procedure, generally,
is that the client tells the Islamic
bank which vehicle he or she would like
to own. The Islamic bank then purchases
that vehicle in its name, and sells
it to the client at a marked-up price,
under an agreement that the new marked-up
price of the vehicle must be paid in
a certain number of installments of
a certain time period. Thus a $20,000
car might cost $35,000 if purchased
from an Islamic bank at "zero interest,"
5 year loan. Of course, the bank charges
the extra $15,000 on top of the $20,000
cost of the car because money has a
time value (that is to say, a payment
of $20,000 5 years from now is worth
less than a payment of $20,000 today).
This is also why a $20,000 car could
cost $35,000 if the purchase were financed
by an interest bearing loan issued by
a non-Islamic financial institution.
Usually,
time value of money is compensated
to the lender by the lender charging
the borrower interest on the principal
amount of the loan. In the case of Islamic
banking, the lost time value is compensated
by charging a mark-up on the home or
vehicle that the client might be seeking
to purchase by way of a loan. The vehicle
or mortgage usually remains in the name
of the bank, until the principal loan
including the mark-up has been paid.
In the case of a business loan, instead
of charging interest over the time that
the principal amount is loaned out,
an Islamic bank will demand a certain
percentage of the borrower's business
profits for an indefinite period of
time.
Under a conventional interest based
loan it is possible to "call" the loan
if the interest rate drops and the borrower
finds that he can find cheaper financing
(i.e. pays off the entire loan before
the end of its term, thus paying less
interest). However, there is no way
to call a loan issued by an Islamic
bank. Thus, while the borrower from
an Islamic bank is protected against
interest rate increases, the borrower
cannot benefit from interest rate drops.
In theory, Islamic banking should be
synonymous with
full-reserve banking, with banks
achieving a 100%
reserve ratio. However in practice
this is rarely the case.
[Read Main article:
Islamic banking ]
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Source and
Copy Right Information:
Wikipedia
information about Islamic economical
jurisprudence. This article
is licensed under the
GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
Wikipedia article "Islamic economical
jurisprudence".
More
from
Wikipedia
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Islamic Economics
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Other Economic
Concepts in Islam |
Debt arrangements
Most Islamic economic institutions advise
participatory arrangements between
capital and
labor. The latter rule reflects
the Islamic norm that the borrower must
not bear all the cost of a failure,
as "it is God who determines that failure,
and intends that it fall on all those
involved."
Conventional debt arrangements are thus
usually unacceptable - but conventional
venture investment structures are applied
even on very small scales. However,
not every debt arrangement can be seen
in terms of venture investment structures.
For example, when a family buys a home
it is not investing in a business venture
- a person's shelter is not a business
venture. Similarly, purchasing other
commodities for personal use, such as
cars, furniture, and so on, cannot realistically
be considered as a venture investment
in which the Islamic bank shares risks
and profits for the profits of the venture.
Natural capital
Perhaps due to resource scarcity in
most Islamic nations, this form of economics
also emphasizes limited (and some claim
also
sustainable) use of
natural capital, i.e. producing
land. These latter revive traditions
of
haram and
hima that were prevalent in
early Muslim
civilization.
Welfare
Social welfare,
unemployment,
public debt and
globalization have been re-examined
from the perspective of Islamic norms
and values. Islamic banks have grown
recently in the Muslim world but are
a very small share of the global economy
compared to the Western debt banking
paradigm. It remains to be seen if they
will find niches - although hybrid approaches,
e.g.
Grameen Bank which applies classical
Islamic values but uses conventional
lending practices, are much lauded by
some proponents of modern
human development theory.
Islamic stocks
In
June 2005
Dow Jones Indexes,
New York, and
RHB Securities,
Kuala Lumpur, teamed up to launch
a new "Islamic
Malaysia Index" —a collection
of 45 stocks representing Malaysian
companies that comply with a variety
of Shariah-based criteria. Three variables
(the total debt of an indexed company,
its total cash plus interest-bearing
securities and its accounts receivables)
must each be less than 33% of the trailing
12-month average capitalization, for
example.
Dump merge
Islamic Finance is based on interpretations
from the
Qur'an. Its two central tenets are
no
interest can be earned on
loans and socially responsible
investing. The key difference from
a
financial perspective is the no-interest
rule since the
Islamic socially responsible investing
paradigm is not much different from
what other religions do.
Quran, the holy book of Islam, forbids
Riba (or interest). The book has
the 4 key verses upon which the no-interest
principle is based. Many of the differences
in Islamic finance (especially
Islamic banking) revolve around
this no interest principle.
For example, Islamic
banks must take
equity positions in homes rather
than taking a traditional
mortgage. Others examples include
essentially
profit sharing plans,
leasing, and repurchase plans. These
allow the
financial institution to make money
while satisfying the no-interest principle.
The second difference between Islamic
finance and traditional finance is the
emphasis on socially responsible investing.
While in the Western financial tradition
there are many investors who invest
in "socially responsible" means, socially
responsible investing is not as wide
spread as it is within the Islamic tradition.
Islam takes a
holistic view of the person. Thus
someone who is good does good things.
This includes investing responsibly
to assure that the money does not go
for "bad" purposes. These "bad" purposes
include the usual subjects such as
drugs,
weapons,
alcohol,
pornography, and
terrorism. Again this is really
no different from traditional socially
responsible investing.
Popularity and availability
Today there are many financial institutions,
even in the Western world, offering
financial services and products in accordance
with the rules of the Islamic finance.
For example, legal changes introduced
by Chancellor
Gordon Brown in 2003, have enabled
British banks and
building societies to offer so-called
Muslim mortgages
for house purchase.
In 2004 the UK's first stand alone Sharia'a
complaint bank was launched, the
Islamic Bank of Britain. They offer
products and services to its UK customers
that utilise the Islamic financial principles;
such as Mudaraba, Murabaha, Musharaka
and Qard.
The Islamic finance sector was worth
between 300 and 500 billion dollars
(237 and 394 billion euros) as of September
2006, compared with 200 billion dollars
in 2004. The number of Islamic retail
banks and
investment funds number in their
hundreds and many Western financial
institutions offer products that comply
with
Sharia law, including
Citigroup,
Deutsche Bank,
HSBC,
Lloyds TSB and
UBS.
[3]
In practice: [ Read
Main article:
Islamic economics in the world
]
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Source and
Copy Right Information:
Wikipedia
information about Islamic economical
jurisprudence. This article
is licensed under the
GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
Wikipedia article "Islamic economical
jurisprudence".
More
from
Wikipedia
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