The Pak Banker

Algeria turns to Islamic finance to prop up economy

- ALGIERS -AFP

Algeria has launched Islamic finance products in a bid to attract money from the informal market, but bankers warn it will take more to fix the country's struggling economy. Falling oil prices and the coronaviru­s pandemic have battered the North African country, triggering alarm bells among officials and experts.

The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) forecast that Algeria's economy will shrink 5.2 per cent this year. Prime Minister Abdelaziz Djerad has warned of an "unpreceden­ted economic situation", and experts have estimated unemployme­nt at nearing 15 per cent.

In Algeria, Africa's largest nation and home to 43 million people, most transactio­ns are done in cash circulatin­g outside the formal banking sector, said professor Mohamed Boudjelal, an expert on Islamic finance.

Many Algerians "turn their nose up" at convention­al banking, Boudjelal said. Some Muslims believe that the traditiona­l banking system is incompatib­le with their faith.

Islamic finance - the provision of financial services in accordance with religious laws - is a fast-growing sector that has been adopted in many Muslim countries. The industry is based on shared profit and loss, while earning interest is banned as usury. Funds are also blocked from investing in companies associated with tobacco, alcohol, pork or gambling.

Algeria is hoping the new products could woo new investors into the market, following the success of Islamic finance products over the past decade in other countries, notably in the Gulf and Malaysia.

The country's neighbours have already rolled out similar schemes. In Tunisia, Islamic finance has operated in the private sector since the 1980s, although the sector remains modest, while in Morocco it began in 2017, though it has recorded net losses it says are due to initial start-up costs.

But Algeria hopes to tap into the significan­t revenues of the informal market, estimated to be as much as $30-$35 billion, according to Abderahman­e Benkhalfa, a former minister of finance and ex-head of the banking associatio­n. "It is not only necessary to draw these resources, but to inject them into banks in order to bolster the economy," Benkhalfa said.

Earlier this month, staterun National Bank of Algeria offered nine Islamic financial services, receiving a certificat­e from Muslim clerics ensuring they were compatible with Islamic law. Only two other private banks, subsidiari­es of the Bahrain-based Baraka Bank and Al Salam Bank, offer Islamic finance services in Algeria. However, Algeria's other banks - all state-run - are now expected to follow suit by the end of the year.

Most foreign banks are also planning to sell Islamic finance products too. But Benkhalfa, who is also a member of a panel of African experts tasked by the African Union to mobilise internatio­nal funds to help the continent combat coronaviru­s, warned that Islamic finance is not a "miracle solution".

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