Islamic banking: The firewall against the global financial crisis

The global financial crisis that devastated many of the world's financial systems in a manner never seen before exposed the glaring weakness in risk management and interest-driven policies. The crisis brought the collapse of several iconic financial institutions once perceived to be too strong...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of Applied Business Research
Main Author: Othman R.; Aris N.A.; Azli R.M.; Arshad R.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2012
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84155195810&doi=10.19030%2fjabr.v28i1.6679&partnerID=40&md5=8fee51d494f46391ad3d977e8f1fc65c
id 2-s2.0-84155195810
spelling 2-s2.0-84155195810
Othman R.; Aris N.A.; Azli R.M.; Arshad R.
Islamic banking: The firewall against the global financial crisis
2012
Journal of Applied Business Research
28
1
10.19030/jabr.v28i1.6679
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84155195810&doi=10.19030%2fjabr.v28i1.6679&partnerID=40&md5=8fee51d494f46391ad3d977e8f1fc65c
The global financial crisis that devastated many of the world's financial systems in a manner never seen before exposed the glaring weakness in risk management and interest-driven policies. The crisis brought the collapse of several iconic financial institutions once perceived to be too strong to capitulate. The crisis engulfed one economy after another from corporations to eventually bring about the collapse of governments of countries reeling from the impact of the crisis. Asset values plummeted and the crisis clearly demonstrated the fragility of the western capitalist system and the free market economy. The Islamic economic and financial system is anchored on universal honorable values, ideals and morals - honesty, credibility, transparency, co-operation and solidarity. These fundamental values uphold stability, security and safety in any financial transactions. Of paramount consideration is that the Shari'ah prohibits any economic and financial transactions that involve usury, lying, gambling, cheating, unsubstantiated risk or uncertainty (gharar), monopoly, exploitation, greed, unfairness and taking other people's money unjustly. Another key aspect to the philosophy behind the Islamic financial system is money issued must be fully asset backed. It is impermissible to allow money to be traded for money except at par. Islam is not just the prohibition of riba and zakah (alms); it is a comprehensive system to fulfill society's basic necessities (food, clothing and shelter). History has demonstrated that Islam has the capacity to deliver and has succeeded in providing a viable economic system. © 2012 The Clute Institute.

08927626
English
Article
All Open Access; Bronze Open Access
author Othman R.; Aris N.A.; Azli R.M.; Arshad R.
spellingShingle Othman R.; Aris N.A.; Azli R.M.; Arshad R.
Islamic banking: The firewall against the global financial crisis
author_facet Othman R.; Aris N.A.; Azli R.M.; Arshad R.
author_sort Othman R.; Aris N.A.; Azli R.M.; Arshad R.
title Islamic banking: The firewall against the global financial crisis
title_short Islamic banking: The firewall against the global financial crisis
title_full Islamic banking: The firewall against the global financial crisis
title_fullStr Islamic banking: The firewall against the global financial crisis
title_full_unstemmed Islamic banking: The firewall against the global financial crisis
title_sort Islamic banking: The firewall against the global financial crisis
publishDate 2012
container_title Journal of Applied Business Research
container_volume 28
container_issue 1
doi_str_mv 10.19030/jabr.v28i1.6679
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84155195810&doi=10.19030%2fjabr.v28i1.6679&partnerID=40&md5=8fee51d494f46391ad3d977e8f1fc65c
description The global financial crisis that devastated many of the world's financial systems in a manner never seen before exposed the glaring weakness in risk management and interest-driven policies. The crisis brought the collapse of several iconic financial institutions once perceived to be too strong to capitulate. The crisis engulfed one economy after another from corporations to eventually bring about the collapse of governments of countries reeling from the impact of the crisis. Asset values plummeted and the crisis clearly demonstrated the fragility of the western capitalist system and the free market economy. The Islamic economic and financial system is anchored on universal honorable values, ideals and morals - honesty, credibility, transparency, co-operation and solidarity. These fundamental values uphold stability, security and safety in any financial transactions. Of paramount consideration is that the Shari'ah prohibits any economic and financial transactions that involve usury, lying, gambling, cheating, unsubstantiated risk or uncertainty (gharar), monopoly, exploitation, greed, unfairness and taking other people's money unjustly. Another key aspect to the philosophy behind the Islamic financial system is money issued must be fully asset backed. It is impermissible to allow money to be traded for money except at par. Islam is not just the prohibition of riba and zakah (alms); it is a comprehensive system to fulfill society's basic necessities (food, clothing and shelter). History has demonstrated that Islam has the capacity to deliver and has succeeded in providing a viable economic system. © 2012 The Clute Institute.
publisher
issn 08927626
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