PRINCIPLE OF
ISLAAMIC BANKING
[This article was published in
the 10th issue of
Nida'ul Islam
magazine, November-December 1995] Source: MSA-USC
For millions of Muslims, banks
are institutions to be avoided. Islam is a religion which keeps
Believers from the teller's window. Their Islamic beliefs
prevent them from dealings that involve usury or interest
(Riba). Yet Muslims need banking services as much as
anyone and for many purposes: to finance new business ventures,
to buy a house, to buy a car, to facilitate capital investment,
to undertake trading activities, and to offer a safe place for
savings. For Muslims are not averse to legitimate profit as
Islam encourages people to use money in Islamically legitimate
ventures, not just to keep their funds idle.
However, in this fast moving
world, more than 1400 years after the Prophet (s.a.w.), can
Muslims find room for the principles of their religion? The
answer comes with the fact that a global network of Islamic
banks, investment houses and other financial institutions has
started to take shape based on the principles of Islamic
finance laid down in the Qur'ân and the Prophet's traditions 14
centuries ago. Islamic banking, based on the Qur'ânic
prohibition of charging interest, has moved from a theoretical
concept to embrace more than 100 banks operating in 40
countries with multi-billion dollar deposits world-wide.
Islamic banking is widely regarded as the fastest growing
sector in the Middle Eastern financial services market.
Exploding onto the financial scene barely thirty years ago, an
estimated $US 70 billion worth of funds are now managed
according to Shari'ah. Deposit assets held by Islamic banks
were approximately $US5 billion in 1985 but grew over $60
billion in 1994.
The best known feature of
Islamic banking is the prohibition on interest. The Qur'ân
forbids the charging of Riba on money lent. It is important to
understand certain principles of Islam that underpin Islamic
finance. The Shari'ah consists of the Qur'ânic commands as laid
down in the Holy Qur'ân and the words and deeds of the Prophet
Muhammad (s.a.w.). The Shari'ah disallows Riba and there is now
a general consensus among Muslim economists that Riba is not
restricted to usury but encompasses interest as well. The
Qur'ân is clear about the prohibition of Riba, which is
sometimes defined as excessive interest. "O You who believe!
Fear Allah and give up that remains of your demand for usury,
if you are indeed believers." Muslim scholars have accepted
the word Riba to mean any fixed or guaranteed interest payment
on cash advances or on deposits. Several Qur'ânic passages
expressly admonish the faithful to shun interest.
The rules regarding Islamic
finance are quite simple and can be summed up as follows:
a) Any predetermined payment
over and above the actual amount of principal is prohibited.
Islam allows only one kind of loan and that is qard-el-hassan
(literally good loan) whereby the lender does not charge any
interest or additional amount over the money lent. Traditional
Muslim jurists have construed this principle so strictly that,
according to one commentator "this prohibition applies to any
advantage or benefits that the lender might secure out of the
qard (loan) such as riding the borrower's mule, eating at his
table, or even taking advantage of the shade of his wall." The
principle derived from the quotation emphasizes that associated
or indirect benefits are prohibited.
b) The lender must share in
the profits or losses arising out of the enterprise for which
the money was lent.
Islam encourages Muslims to invest their money and to become
partners in order to share profits and risks in the business
instead of becoming creditors. As defined in the Shari'ah, or
Islamic law, Islamic finance is based on the belief that the
provider of capital and the user of capital should equally
share the risk of business ventures, whether those are
industries, farms, service companies or simple trade deals.
Translated into banking terms, the depositor, the bank and the
borrower should all share the risks and the rewards of
financing business ventures. This is unlike the interest-based
commercial banking system, where all the pressure is on the
borrower: he must pay back his loan, with the agreed interest,
regardless of the success or failure of his venture.
The principle which thereby
emerges is that Islam encourages investments in order that the
community may benefit. However, it is not willing to allow a
loophole to exist for those who do not wish to invest and take
risks but rather content with hoarding money or depositing
money in a bank in return for receiving an increase on these
funds for no risk (other than the bank becoming insolvent).
Accordingly, under Islam, either people invest with risk or
suffer loss through devaluation by inflation by keeping their
money idle. Islam encourages the notion of higher risks and
higher returns and promotes it by leaving no other avenue
available to investors. The objective is that high risk
investments provide a stimulus to the economy and encourage
entrepreneurs to maximise their efforts.
c) Making money from money is
not Islamically acceptable.
Money is only a medium of exchange, a way of defining the value
of a thing; it has no value in itself, and therefore should not
be allowed to give rise to more money, via fixed interest
payments, simply by being put in a bank or lent to someone
else. The human effort, initiative, and risk involved in a
productive venture are more important than the money used to
finance it. Muslim jurists consider money as potential capital
rather than capital, meaning that money becomes capital only
when it is invested in business. Accordingly, money advanced to
a business as a loan is regarded as a debt of the business and
not capital and, as such, it is not entitled to any return
(i.e. interest). Muslims are encouraged to purchase and are
discouraged from keeping money idle so that, for instance,
hoarding money is regarded as being unacceptable. In Islam,
money represents purchasing power which is considered to be the
only proper use of money. This purchasing power (money) cannot
be used to make more purchasing power (money) without
undergoing the intermediate step of it being used for the
purchase of goods and services.
d) Gharar (Uncertainty, Risk
or Speculation) is also prohibited.
Under this prohibition any transaction entered into should be
free from uncertainty, risk and speculation. Contracting
parties should have perfect knowledge of the counter values
intended to be exchanged as a result of their transactions.
Also, parties cannot predetermine a guaranteed profit. This is
based on the principle of 'uncertain gains' which, on a strict
interpretation, does not even allow an undertaking from the
customer to repay the borrowed principal plus an amount to take
into account inflation. The rationale behind the prohibition is
the wish to protect the weak from exploitation. Therefore,
options and futures are considered as un-Islamic and so are
forward foreign exchange transactions because rates are
determined by interest differentials.
A number of Islamic scholars
disapprove the indexation of indebtedness to inflation and
explain this prohibition within the framework of qard-el-hassan.
According to those scholars, the creditor advances the loan to
win the blessings of Allah and expects to obtain the reward
from Allah alone. A number of transactions are treated as
exceptions to the principle of gharar : sales with advanced
payment (bai' bithaman ajil); contract to manufacture (Istisna);
and hire contract (Ijara). However, there are legal
requirements for the conclusion of these contracts to be
organised in a way which minimises risk.
e) Investments should only
support practices or products that are not forbidden -or even
discouraged- by Islam. Trade in alcohol, for example would not
be financed by an Islamic bank; a real-estate loan could not be
made for the construction of a casino; and the bank could not
lend money to other banks at interest.