Название: Introduction to Islamic Banking and Finance
Автор: M Kabir Hassan
Издательство: Ingram
Жанр: Банковское дело
isbn: 9789811222702
isbn:
On the other hand, in the interest-based financial intermediation, the market interest rate becomes a benchmark return or hurdle rate of return. Social and environment friendly investment projects yielding a lower rate of return than the market rate of return remain unfunded as a result.
In addition to that, firms having an obligation to service debts with fixed payments regardless of their profitability are compelled to push growth in revenues. Often, this results in aggressive advertising and promoting consumerism to meet the cost of interest on borrowed funds. If the demand remains sluggish, then the surplus output remains unsold and causes a recession in the economy leading to unemployment.
Furthermore, since interest is an additional cost in the production process, there is lesser chunk of cost budget available to invest in environmental friendly technologies. Thus, firms squeeze budget by paying less to unskilled labour and overuse other resources which may cause environmental problems. Rather than internalizing the cost of damaging ecological imbalance, firms free ride on whatever leeway they obtain to use and overuse public goods and common property resources.
Finally, since the loans are usually provided to richer segments of the population who can furnish collateral and already have sufficient incomes to service the cost of debts, the gap in incomes between those who are able to access credit services and those who are not able to access credit services rises overtime.
2.2Critical Analysis of Arguments in Favour of Interest
Sometimes, arguments are made in favour of the justification of interest. These arguments are not potent from the perspective of economics. This section looks at some of these arguments and shows how they do not justify the institution of interest from even the economics standpoint.
2.2.1Interest is the price of risk
Lending money for stipulated interest does not involve risk. The lender gets interest in any situation, no matter whether the borrower earns profit or loss. Even when the borrower takes a loan for meeting health expense or buys essential food intake from the borrowed money, the borrower is required to pay interest. Even when the loans are provided to commercial businesses, the returns from enterprise in the real economy are uncertain. After taking the risk, businesses either earn profit or incur loss.
2.2.2Share in the profit of the borrower
Interest cannot be regarded as the profit share in the business of the borrower. Not all borrowing is for commercial purposes. Even when borrowing is sought for commercial undertakings, the lender does not agree on sharing profits. Rather, the lender stipulates a pre-determined rate of increase demanded over the principal amount of loan. For sharing in the profit and loss of the business, the appropriate way of engagement is to provide investment funds on equity financing basis. In genuine equity financing, profit-sharing ratio is agreed at the beginning. If the profit is earned, it is shared on the basis of profit-sharing ratio. If there is a loss, it is shared on the basis of investment share.
2.2.3Interest is a rent on money
It must be noted that the assets on which rent is charged are used and given back in the same existing condition after the use, such as homes or cars. On the other hand, money and other consumption goods are consumed. When we borrow money, we consume it and then regenerate it to repay our liabilities. In a loan transaction, when the money is used by the borrower, it is consumed. The borrower has to regenerate it and the lender without taking any risk is entitled to receive the consumed money with interest. An example here would illustrate the difference between rentable and non-rentable goods. Can we borrow apples or mangoes on rent? The answer is “no” since these are consumption goods. Thus, we can borrow a hammer, but not the nails based on the above classification between rentable and non-rentable goods.
2.3Flow of Funds in the Islamic Capital Market
On the choice of financial architecture, we have two major systems: bank based and market based. Market-based systems are characterized by large and active capital markets where firms are able to raise external funds by issuing debt and equity securities. On the contrary, bank-based systems are characterized by financial systems where a major source of external finance is banks.
Several researchers deliberated on the relative merits of both systems, but the consensus view of recent research is that classifying countries as bank based or market based is not important. Bank-based view holds that bank-based systems — particularly at early stages of economic development and in weak institutional settings — do a better job than market-based financial systems at mobilizing savings, allocating capital and exerting corporate control. In contrast, the market-based view emphasizes that markets provide key financial services that stimulate innovation and long-run growth. This section discusses the flow and allocation of investible funds in the Islamic capital market.
The Islamic capital market avoids the elements of interest and instead allocates capital investments based on the profit-sharing ratio. In any typical economy, there are some consumers who have income which is more than their consumption for the period. Such individuals are known as saving surplus units where the savings in a period are the portion of income that is not consumed in the same period. These consumers are required to pay Zakat on their surplus wealth endowment in every period if their wealth is above the value of Nisab. In contrast to the interest-based asset market, there is no fixed return that they can earn at the prevailing rate of interest by simply lending their surplus savings to a financial institution or debt issuer in the interest-based capital markets. Thus, in order to avoid a reduction in wealth and to earn any legitimate return on their surplus savings, these saving surplus units have to undertake investment in the real economy.
In making investments, these consumers forgo present consumption for possibly higher future consumption. In the light of economic theory and empirical evidence in both mainstream and behavioural finance literature, the amount of investments they make would depend on their (i) marginal rate of substitution between current and future consumption, (ii) reward to variability ratio of the investment undertaking, and (iii) the degree of loss aversion in their preferences. They will reveal their preferences by responding in terms of making different levels of capital investments at different levels of profit-sharing ratio. Steep indifferences curves, i.e. higher marginal rate of substitution for intertemporal consumption and loss aversion, would make them demand a higher profitsharing ratio for themselves. On the other hand, a higher Sharpe ratio (i.e. higher reward to variability ratio) of a potential investment under-taking would enable them to reap the target level of return even with a lower profit-sharing ratio. Sharpe ratio is the excess return on investment divided by the standard deviation of the return.
In addition to that, in an economy, there will be individuals or groups of individuals who would be looking to pursue productive investments, but remain short of funds. Such individuals would require capital investments. In return, they would offer profit sharing in the investment undertaking. As is the practice, the ex-ante profit-sharing ratio is offered by saving deficient units looking to source finance. The factors that determine this offered profit-sharing ratio include the (i) amount of capital needed, (ii) duration of investment, and (iii) reward to variability ratio of the investment undertaking. The greater the capital requirement and the duration of investment undertaking, the higher will be the offered profitsharing ratio. However, the higher the reward to variability ratio, the lower will be the offered profit-sharing ratio.
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