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Introduction to Islamic Finance Sami Al-Suwailem IRTI, IDB Thul-Qida 1430H –November 2009 Pillars of Islamic Finance Non-profit Domain For-profit Domain For-profit domain Non-profit domain A balanced approach For-profit Non-profit Motives Self-interest Altruism Objective Productivity Fairness Creation Distribution Relationship Competition Cooperation Regulation Prohibitions Obligations Wealth impact Like a bird, an economy needs the two sectors to fly Brotherhood replaces both individualism and communism Brothers are similar enough to promote sympathy and cooperation But they are different enough to allow for specialization and trade Brotherhood encompasses both domains Zakat Nafaqat Inheritance law Sharing in times of necessity, starvation, or hardship Obligatory donation Applies to idle money (not used for one year) Measure against hoarding Hoarding and the current financial crisis? Obligatory spending for designated relatives Parents, family, close relatives Subject to need Coordination Civil standards “Tragedy of the commons” “The whole is greater than the sum” Safety net Less moral hazard than government net Preservation of wealth Happiness cannot be achieved by one domain Balance allows both to flourish and thrive Prohibition of israf Prohibition of usury or riba Prohibition of gharar or wagering Over-spending or over-utilization of resources In consumption: extravagant spending Conspicuous consumption and status games In investment: Greed—“Irrational exuberance” Bubbles => crashes Wealth preservation is an essential objective of Shari’ah Israf violates preservation of wealth Results: pollution, global warming, depletion of resources Essence of economics is to avoid israf Riba or usury: any stipulated addition over a loan Includes both simple and compound interest Prohibited by all divine religions as well as Buddhism Two-thirds of world population subscribe to this belief Debt grows faster than wealth Debt cannot be paid except with new debt Debt burden destroys the economy 1000 1,546,318,920,731,950,000,000 1500 60,806,303,788,323,700,000,000,000,000,000 2000 2,391,102,204,613,620,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 1 pence borrowed at 4% in 1 AD In 1750 debt equals weight of the globe of gold In 1990 it equals 8190 globes! Average growth annual rate: Debt: 39%, GDP: 21%, M2: 19% Debt-GDP ratio: 1.3 to 2.2 Debt-M2 ratio: 2.2 to 4.2 Debt Wealth Inverted pyramid is not sustainable Crashes needed to “clean up” the system Then debts start to accumulate again faster than wealth Recurrent crashes Very costly to maintain the system Theory: Intertemporal Budget Constraint: The present value of debt go to zero Prevents Ponzi financing Reality: E.U. requirements: Deficit < 3% of GDP Debt < 60% of GDP Problem: Need to govern debt from the ground-up Debt creation is integrated with wealth creation For-profit debt must be contractually embedded in real transactions Islamic modes of finance: Deferred sale; salam; leasing; Sale of a good for a deferred price Price includes markup Time value is paired with real value Murabaha: Financing deferred sale Opposite of deferred sale Price is spot; good is deferred Time-value is reflected in lower price Trade Loan Exchange different items Exchange identical items Gains from trade No gains from trade Creates wealth Cannot create wealth Similarity negates gain from trade Variety allows mutual benefit Diversity is essential for prosperity Stronger similarity imposes stronger restrictions of exchange Riba: imbalanced exchange of similars Loan Trade Low High value Low restrictions Similarity High Low value High restrictions Debt Wealth Creditor must forbear if debtor is in difficulty Why forbearance is important for stability? Foreclosure causes prices to fall Which leads to additional defaults Which leads to more foreclosures Which makes prices go even lower And so forth Unregulated credit expansion Regulated credit expansion Forbearance enacted No forbearance Universal principles Sound economic reasoning Balanced approach