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Evolution
| Rationale | Anatomy
| Literature:
Theory
Literature:
Practice | Conclusion
| Glossary
Appendix:
Islamic Financial Institutions | References
Literature:
Theory
It is not possible to
cover in this survey all the publications which have appeared
on Islamic banking. There are numerous publications in Arabic
and Urdu which have made significant contributions to the
theoretical discussion. A brief description of these in
English can be found in the appendix to Siddiqi's book on Banking
without Interest (Siddiqi 1983a).
The early contributions
on the subject of Islamic banking were somewhat casual in the
sense that only passing references were made to it in the
discussion of wider issues relating to the Islamic economic
system as a whole. In
other words, the early writers had been simply thinking aloud
rather than presenting well-thought-out ideas. Thus, for
example, the book by Qureshi on Islam and the Theory of
Interest (Qureshi 1946) looked upon banking as a social
service that should be sponsored by the government like public
health and education. Qureshi took this point of view since
the bank could neither pay any interest to account holders nor
charge any interest on loans advanced. Qureshi also spoke of
partnerships between banks and businessmen as a possible
alternative, sharing losses if any. No mention was made of
profit-sharing.
Ahmad, in Chapter VII
of his book Economics of Islam (Ahmad 1952), envisaged
the establishment of Islamic banks on the basis of a joint
stock company with limited liability. In his scheme, in
addition to current accounts, on which no dividend or interest
should be paid, there was an account in which people could
deposit their capital on the basis of partnership, with
shareholders receiving higher dividends than the account
holders from the profits made. Like Qureshi, above, Ahmad also
spoke of possible partnership arrangements with the
businessmen who seek capital from the banks. However, the
partnership principle was left undefined, nor was it clear who
would bear the loss if any. It was suggested that banks should
cash bills of trade without charging interest, using the
current account funds.
The principle of mudaraba
based on Shariah was invoked systematically by Uzair
(1955). His principal contribution lay in suggesting mudaraba
as the main premise for 'interestless banking'. However, his
argument that the bank should not make any capital investment
with its own deposits rendered his analysis somewhat
impractical.
Al-Arabi (1966)
envisaged a banking system with mudaraba as the main
pivot. He was actually advancing the idea of a two-tier mudaraba
which would enable the bank to mobilize savings on a mudaraba
basis, allocating the funds so mobilized also on a mudaraba
basis. In other words the bank would act as a mudarib
in so far as the depositors were concerned, while the
'borrowers' would act as mudaribs in so far as the bank
was concerned. In his scheme, the bank could advance not only
the capital procured through deposits but also the capital of
its own shareholders. It is also of interest to note that his
position with regard to the distribution of profits and the
responsibility for losses was strictly in accordance with the Shariah
(6).
Irshad (1964) also
spoke of mudaraba as the basis of Islamic banking, but
his concept of mudaraba was quite different from the
traditional one in that he thought of capital and labour
(including entrepreneurship) as having equal shares in output,
thus sharing the losses and profits equally. This actually
means that the owner of capital and the entrepreneur have a
fifty-fifty share in the profit or loss as the case may be,
which runs counter to the Shariah position. Irshad
envisaged two kinds of deposit accounts. The first sounded
like current deposits in the sense that it would be payable on
demand, but the money kept in this deposit would be used for
social welfare projects, as the depositors would get zero
return. The second one amounted to term deposits which would
entitle the depositors to a share in the profits at the end of
the year proportionately to the size and duration of the
deposits. He recommended the setting up of a Reserve Fund
which would absorb all losses so that no depositor would have
to bear any loss. According to Irshad, all losses would be
either recovered from the Reserve Fund or borne by the
shareholders of the bank.
A pioneering attempt at
providing a fairly detailed outline of Islamic banking was
made in Urdu by Siddiqi in 1968. (The English version was not
published until 1983.) His Islamic banking model was based on mudaraba
and shirka (partnership or musharaka as it is
now usually called). His model was essentially one based on a
two-tier mudaraba financier-entrepreneur relationship,
but he took pains to describe the mechanics of such
transactions in considerable detail with numerous hypothetical
and arithmetic examples. He classified the operations of an
Islamic bank into three
categories: services based on fees, commissions or other fixed
charges; financing on the basis of mudaraba and
partnership; and services provided free of charge. His thesis
was that such interest-free banks could be a viable
alternative to interest-based conventional banks.
The issue of loans for
consumption clearly presents a problem, as there is no profit
to be shared. Siddiqi addressed this problem, but he managed
only to scratch the surface. While recognizing the need for
such interest-free loans (qard hasan), especially for
meeting basic needs, he seemed to think it was the duty of the
community and the State (through its baitul mal or
treasury) to cater to those needs; the Islamic bank's primary
objective, like that of any other business unit, is to earn
profit. He therefore tended to downplay the role of Islamic
banks in providing consumption loans, but he suggested limited
overdraft facilities without interest. He even considered a
portion of the fund being set aside for consumption loans,
repayment being guaranteed by the State. He also suggested
that consumers buying durables on credit would issue
'certificates of sale' which could be encashed by the seller
at the bank for a fee. It was then the seller not the buyer
who would be liable as far as the bank was concerned. However,
the principles of murabaha and bai' muajjal were
not invoked.
Strangely, Siddiqi
favoured keeping the number of shareholders to the minimum,
without advancing any strong reasons. This is contrary to the
general consensus which now seems to have emerged with
reference to Islamic banks operating on a joint stock company
basis, a consensus which incidentally is also in line with the
Islamic value attached to a broad equity base as against heavy
concentration of equity and wealth. Ironically, Siddiqi
thought that interest-free banking could operate successfully
'only in a country where interest is legally prohibited and
any transaction based upon interest is declared a punishable
offence' (1983b:l3). He also thought it important to have
Islamic laws enforced before interest-free banking could
operate well. This view has not gained acceptance, as
demonstrated by the many Islamic banks which operate
profitably in 'hostile' environments, as noted earlier.
Chapra's model of
Islamic banking (Chapra 1982), like Siddiqi's, was based on
the mudaraba principle. His main concern, however,
centred on the role of artificial purchasing power through
credit creation. He even suggested that 'seigniorage'
resulting from it should be transferred to the public
exchequer, for the sake of equity and justice. Al-Jarhi (1983)
went so far as to favour the imposition of a l00 per cent
reserve requirement on commercial banks. Chapra was also much
concerned about the concentration of economic power private
banks might enjoy in a system based on equity financing. He
therefore preferred mediumsized banks which are neither so
large as to wield excessive power nor so small as to be
uneconomical. Chapra's scheme also contained proposals for
loss-compensating reserves and loss-absorbing insurance
facilities. He also spoke of non-bank financial institutions,
which specialize in bringing financiers and entrepreneurs
together and act as investment trusts.
Mohsin (1982) has
presented a detailed and elaborate framework of Islamic
banking in a modern setting. His model incorporates the
characteristics of commercial, merchant, and development
banks, blending them in novel fashion. It adds various
non-banking services such as trust business, factoring, real
estate, and consultancy, as though interest-free banks could
not survive by banking business alone. Many of the activities
listed certainly go beyond the realm of commercial banking and
are of so sophisticated and specialized a nature that they may
be thought irrelevant to most Muslim countries at their
present stage of development. Mohsin's model clearly was
designed to fit into a capitalist environment; indeed he
explicitly stated that riba-free banks could coexist
with interest-based banks.
The point that there is
more to Islamic banking than mere abolition of interest was
driven home strongly by Chapra (1985). He envisaged Islamic
banks whose nature, outlook and operations could be distinctly
different from those of conventional banks. Besides the
outlawing of riba, he considered it essential that
Islamic banks should, since they
handle public funds, serve the public interest rather than
individual or group interests. In other words, they should
play a social-welfare-oriented rather than a profit-maximizing
role. He conceived of Islamic banks as a crossbreed of
commercial and merchant banks, investment trusts and
investment-management institutions that would offer a wide
spectrum of services to their customers. Unlike conventional
banks which depend heavily on the 'crutches of collateral and
of non-participation in risk' (p. l55), Islamic banks would
have to rely heavily on project evaluation, especially for
equity-oriented financing. Thanks to the profit-and-loss
sharing nature of the operations, bank-customer relations
would be much closer and more cordial than is possible under
conventional banking. Finally, the problems of liquidity
shortage or surplus would have to be handled differently in
Islamic banking, since the ban on interest rules out resort to
the money market and the central bank. Chapra suggested
alternatives such as reciprocal accommodation among banks
without interest payments and creation of a common fund at the
central bank into which surpluses would flow and from which
shortages could be met without any interest charges.
The literature also
discusses the question of central banking in an Islamic
framework. The general opinion seems to be that the basic
functions of a modern central bank are relevant also for an
Islamic monetary system, although the mechanisms may have to
be different. Thus, for example, the bank rate instrument
cannot be used as it entails interest. Uzair (1982) has
suggested adjustments in profit-sharing ratios as a substitute
for bank rate manipulations by the central bank. Thus, credit
can be tightened by reducing the share accruing to the
businessmen and eased by increasing it. Siddiqi (1982) has
suggested that variations in the so-called 'refinance ratio'
(which refers to the central bank refinancing of a part of the
interest-free loans provided by the commercial banks) would
influence the quantum of short-term credit extended. Siddiqi
has also proposed a prescribed 'lending ratio' (i.e., the
proportion of demand deposits that commercial banks are
obliged to lend out as interest-free loans) that can be
adjusted by the central bank according to changing
circumstances. In this context, reference may also be made to
a proposal by Uzair (1982) that the central bank should
acquire an equity stake in commercial banking by holding, say,
25 per cent of the capital stock of the commercial banks. The
rationale behind this proposal was that it would give the
central bank access to a permanent source of income so that it
could effectively act as lender of last resort.
The discussion of
central banking in an Islamic context is somewhat scanty,
presumably because Islamic central banking is viewed as too
farfetched an idea, except in Iran and Pakistan.
It emerges from all
this that Islamic banking has three distinguishing features:
(a) it is interest-free, (b) it is multi-purpose and not
purely commercial, and (c) it is strongly equity-oriented. The
literature contains hardly any serious criticism of the
interest-free character of the operation, since this is taken
for granted, although concerns have been expressed about the
lack of adequate interest-free instruments. There is a
near-consensus that Islamic banks can function well without
interest. A recent International Monetary Fund study by Iqbal
and Mirakhor (1987) has found Islamic banking to be a viable
proposition that can result in efficient resource allocation.
The study suggests that banks in an Islamic system face fewer
solvency and liquidity risks than their conventional
counterparts.
The multi-purpose and
extra-commercial nature of the Islamic banking operation does
not seem to pose intractable problems. The abolition of
interest makes it imperative for Islamic banks to look for
other instruments, which renders operations outside the
periphery of commercial banking unavoidable. Such operations
may yield economies of scope. But it is undeniable that the
multipurpose character of Islamic banking poses serious
practical problems, especially in relation to the skills
needed to handle such diverse and complex transactions (Iqbal
and Mirakhor 1987).
The stress on
equity-oriented transactions in Islamic banking, especially
the mudaraba mode, has been criticized. It has been
argued that the replacement of predetermined
interest by uncertain profits is not enough to render a
transaction Islamic, since profit can be just as exploitative
as interest is, if it is 'excessive' (Naqvi 198l). Naqvi has
also pointed out that there is nothing sacrosanct about the
institution of mudaraba in Islam. Naqvi maintains that mudaraba
is not based on the Qur'an or the Hadith but was a custom of
the preIslamic Arabs. Historically, mudaraba, he
contends, enabled the aged, women, and children with capital
to engage in trade through merchants for a share in the
profit, all losses being borne by the owners of capital, and
therefore it cannot claim any sanctity. The fact remains that
the Prophet raised no objection to mudaraba, so that it
was at least not considered un-Islamic.
The distribution of
profit in mudaraba transactions presents practical
difficulties, especially where there are multiple providers of
capital, but these difficulties are not regarded as
insurmountable. The Report of Pakistan's Council of Islamic
Ideology (CII 1983) has suggested that the respective capital
contributions of parties can be converted to a common
denominator by multiplying the amounts provided with the
number of days during which each component, such as the firm's
own equity capital, its current cash surplus and suppliers'
credit was actually deployed in the business, i.e., on a daily
product basis. As for deposits, profits (net of administrative
expenses, taxes, and appropriation for reserves) would be
divided between the shareholders of the bank and the holders
of deposits, again on a daily product basis.
Courtesy
of Mohamed Ariff, University
of Malaya
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