Key Elements Of Islamic Financing - Possibilities For Integration Of Internationally Accepted Financial Products
by
Table of Contents
CHAPTER # 1: INTRODUCTION: OVERVIEW OF ISLAMIC FINANCE AND BANKING MARKET5
Introduction5
Islamic banking instruments: idea and practice8
Profit and decrease distributing (PLS) instruments8
Murabaha (deferred fee sale): idea and practice10
Ijarah (lease financing): idea and practice11
Bai salam (advance payment) and bai istisna (procurement engagement)12
Problems and trials for Islamic banking (banks)12
CHAPTER #2: PURPOSE, DESIGN, METHODOLOGY OF THE STUDY16
Purpose16
Research Design16
Methodology16
Data Analysis17
CHAPTER #3: BACKGROUND OF THE STUDY19
Subchapter #1. Key elements of Islamic Financing19
Takaful Insurance19
Model Mudharabah (profit sharing)19
Islamic Bond (SUKUK)20
Subchapter #2. Overview of Islamic Financial System; foundation, principles of Islamic Finance and banking21
The Islamic banking paradigm21
Subchapter#4. Islamic24
Subchapter# 3. Detailed explanation of Islamic Products26
Mudarabah (Profit Loss Sharing)26
Musharakah (Joint Venture)26
Murabahah (Cost Plus)26
Bai' Bithaman Ajil (Deferred Payment Sale)27
Wakalah (Agency)27
Qardul Hassan (Benevolent Loan)27
Ijarah Thumma Al Bai' (Hire Purchase)28
Bai' al-Inah (Sell and Buy Back Agreement)28
Hibah (Gift)29
Subchapter #4. Comparison of Islamic Finance and Conventional Finance29
Principles of Islamic Finance30
Two important characteristics31
Financial Economics Vs Real Economy32
Economics and Financial Institutions Strengthened32
CHAPTER #4: POSSIBILITIES FOR THE INTEGRATION OF INTERNATIONALLY ACCEPTED FINANCIAL PRODUCTS36
Subchapter #1. Are there any possibilities for the integration of internationally accepted financial product? If yes, what are they?36
Islamic banks regardless of the global financial crisis37
Islamic banks fared better during the financial crisis38
Subchapter#2. Case Studies: at least two case studies:40
Case Study one. Islamic Finance and banking in European countries: USA,UK, Germany.40
Germany40
United Kingdom41
United States and Canada42
Case Study two. Islamic Finance and banking in Muslim countries: Malaysia, Pakistan, other muslim countries.43
Islamic banking in practice: a case study of Pakistan43
CHAPTER # 5: FINDINGS & DISCUSSION45
Scheduled banks data45
Islamic banks' balance sheets46
Risk, liquidity, and asset performance47
Earning and profitability ratios49
Liquidity ratios49
Solvency and risk exposure ratios50
Liabilities and Opportunities50
Criticism and Concerns50
1. Incongruent Goals and Results50
Islamic Moral Hazard52
Arbitrage and Innovation52
Operating in a Conventional International System54
Regulations and Organizations55
CHAPTER # 6: CONCLUSION57
REFERENCES59
GLOSSARY69
Chapter # 1: Introduction: overview of Islamic Finance and banking market
Introduction
The conceptual development of Islamic banking profited impetus after the mid-1940s. Islamic scholars for example Qureshi (2007), Ahmad (2009), Uzair (2010), Maududi (2008), Al-Arabi (2008), Siddiqi (2007) and Al-Sadr (2007) made important assistance to the evolution of the Islamic banking model. The gigantic influx of petrodollars from the late 1970s supplied a powerful impetus to the development of some Islamic banks in the Middle East. Other Muslim nations established their own Islamic economic organisations over time. Islamic banking has made stable advancement over latest decades. In latest years it has appeared as the fastest-growing segment of international finance due to consistently high oil charges in worldwide markets and other favourable socio-political factors. It is flourishing in Africa, Asia, Europe and North America. There are about 300 Islamic economic organisations over 70 nations, retaining capital investments worth US$500-800bn, with an mean yearly development of 15 percent (Arekat, 2008). It has been approximated that Islamic banking will have a market worth of US$4 trillion by 2010 (Cader, 2007). It is anticipated to arrest about 40-50 per cent of the total savings of 1.3 billion Muslims worldwide inside the next eight to 10 years (Alam, 2008).
There has been an unprecedented development and deepening of ...