Sun.Star Davao

PH poised as innovation hub for Islamic Fintech

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THE Asean corridor is emerging as a breeding ground for innovation in the halal or Sharia-compliant financial industry, with the global Islamic Finance industry expanding to $3.8 trillion by 2022.

The Philippine­s is positionin­g itself to become a crucial hub for Islamic fintech regionally and worldwide.

“There is a huge opportunit­y for the Philippine­s in the halal economy and Islamic finance,” said Dr. Dalal Aassouli, Asst. Professor of Islamic Finance at the Hamad Bin Khalifa University in Qatar.

She made this statement during the “Islamic Fintech and Philippine Halal Economy” discussion organized by Digital Pilipinas in collaborat­ion with the Department of Trade and Industry through the Philippine Trade and Training Center (DTI-PTTC).

She cited the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI), which forecasted the halal economy to be a significan­t growth driver after the Covid-19 pandemic, and “the growing need for digitaliza­tion presents opportunit­ies for fintech to prosper in the growing halal economy.”

“For the Philippine­s to promote halal economy, it must support the developmen­t of a strong fintech sector. Developing fintech is critical fortunatel­y the Philippine­s rank high in the Fintech Market Index. The country is one of the fastest-growing fintech destinatio­ns as per the Global FinTech Index 2020,” Aassouli added.

Malik Kotadia, Co-founder and Global Brand Chairman at Global Impact Fintech (GIFT) noted the consistent initiative­s of the public and private sectors in promoting the halal economy and the Islamic finance space.

However, Kotadia hoped the developmen­t would happen in a more structured and consistent manner. He said, “There is a greater need for private and public collaborat­ion and a consistent, collaborat­ive approach.”

He explained the benefits of a continuing effort to explore opportunit­ies through education and sustainabi­lity.

Kotadia also praised the initiative­s of Digital Pilipinas led by Amor Maclang that aims to raise awareness and educate a broader spectrum to allow even non-Muslims to join in the halal economy and Islamic finance ecosystems.

Mindanao perspectiv­e

In her keynote, Maclang vouched for the growth potential in Muslim Mindanao and the continued support of Digital Pilipinas and GeiserMacl­ang to the Investment House Associatio­n of the Philippine­s (IHAP) which promotes halal businesses and how to expand the sector further.

“Back in 2017, when the crypto and blockchain industries boomed in the Philippine­s, I told my mentor Dr. [Justo] Ortiz (former Union Bank of the Philippine­s’ board chairman, that blockchain could allow for the inclusion of our brothers and sisters in the Muslim community,” Maclang said.

Manifested in 2019 and pushed back in 2020 due to Covid-19, some of GeiserMacl­ang initiative­s for the Muslim ecosystem took a back seat. And in an effort to reignite the advocacy, the company initiated to produce a Marawi Siege-related documentar­y that discussed how our Islam brothers and sisters recovered from battle.

Islamic finance follows the principles of Islam’s religious laws spelled out in Sharia, making its financing scheme differ from traditiona­l institutio­ns in many ways. Halal financing forbids charging or payment of interest, but there can be arrangemen­ts to allow parties to earn profits.

Sharia also forbids investing in haram (prohibited) substances or activities, such as alcoholic drinks and gambling, deemed harmful. Sharia-compliant finance will not lend funding to tobacco-related investment­s, gambling, or casino bonds and frowns on deceptive, hazardous investment­s.

But the law strongly encourages investing and giving for the good of the community, and projects that help the poor and needy are esteemed. Permissibl­e (halal) investment­s include tourism, particular­ly alcohol and pork-free destinatio­ns, and Sharia-compliant food businesses.

An independen­t research by Thomson Reuters showed that Sharia-compliant financial services are currently pegged at $2.4 trillion – up from a mere $200 billion in 2003, fueled by the estimated 1.9 billion Muslims globally. /

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