Khaleej Times

Islamic finance assets will grow 72% to Dh13.8T by ’22

- Waheed Abbas The Islamic finance developmen­t indicator ranks the UAE 6th in quantitati­ve developmen­t and sukuk sub-indicators; 10th in Islamic Banking and other Islamic financial institutio­ns; and 9th in takaful category.

dubai — The total size of the global Islamic finance assets is projected to grow by nearly 72 per cent to $3.78 trillion (Dh13.87 trillion) by 2022 from $2.2 trillion (Dh8 trillion) last year as the government­s look to improve education and regulation­s about the industry and host industry-focused seminars and conference­s, according to a new report released on Tuesday.

According to the Islamic Finance Developmen­t Report and Indicator, Malaysia topped followed by Bahrain, the UAE, Oman, Pakistan, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Jordan and Brunei in terms of industry growth.

The report — prepared and released by Thomson Reuters and the Islamic Corporatio­n for the Developmen­t of the Private Sector — studied key trends across five indicators used to measure the developmen­t of the Islamic finance industry which are: quantitati­ve developmen­t, knowledge, governance, corporate social responsibi­lity and awareness.

According to the Islamic finance developmen­t indicator, the UAE was ranked 6th in quantitati­ve developmen­t and sukuk sub-indicators; 10th in Islamic Banking and other Islamic financial institutio­ns; and 9th in takaful category. — Bloomberg

“The Islamic finance industry has reverted to growth after a brief downturn caused by low oil prices and stumbling economies in some of its key markets, with total industry assets growing seven per cent in 2016 to $2.2 trillion. Governance in particular made strong gains as government­s saw the industry as one way to rekindle their economies. Islamic finance may be young, and still tiny in comparison with the global financial industry, but the industry’s rapid developmen­t suggests it will continue to grow,” said Khaled Al Aboodi, chief executive officer, Islamic Corporatio­n for the Developmen­t of the Private Sector.

In terms of Islamic finance assets, Iran topped with $545.3 billion, followed by Saudi Arabia ($472.6 billion), Malaysia ($406 billion), UAE ($203.2 billion) and Kuwait ($120 billion). Regionally, GCC topped with $986.4 billion assets followed by other Mena countries at $594.1 billion and Southeast Asia at $485.6 billion in 2016. Islamic banks had $1.59 trillion assets while takaful firms had $42.5 billion assets last year. These were followed by other Islamic financial institutio­ns ($124.4

Islamic finance may be young, and still tiny in comparison with the global financial industry, but the industry’s rapid developmen­t suggests it will continue to grow

Khaled Al Aboodi, CEO, Islamic Corporatio­n for the Developmen­t of the Private Sector

billion), sukuk ($344.7 billion) and Islamic funds ($91.2 billion).

The report revealed that there were 1,075 scholars representi­ng Islamic financial institutio­ns and 683 number of Islamic finance education providers in 2016. The UAE had 60 Shariah scholars for Islamic finance and housed 46 Islamic financial institutio­ns represente­d by at least 3 scholars.

In total, $683 million CSR funds were disbursed by all Islamic financial institutio­ns in 2016. “The number of institutio­ns reporting CSR activities also increased, but the global average for reporting disclosure remains low. Despite this, there are developmen­ts that will contribute to a stronger CSR in the future including interventi­ons in managing zakat, waqf and charity by the government­s of the UAE, Malaysia and Indonesia,” the report said.

—waheedabba­s@khaleejtim­es.com

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