Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Reclaiming genuine Islamic economics, finance, banking

An important aspect in the process of reclaiming the philosophi­cal foundation­s of Islamic economics, finance and banking in contempora­ry times are its features of inclusivit­y and universal appeal

- JASMIN OMERCIC* *Senior research fellow at U.S.-based Maqasid Institute, a research affiliate of the Internatio­nal Institute of Islamic Thought, Internatio­nal Islamic University Malaysia

Amid the inflationa­ry and disruptive socioecono­mic circumstan­ces caused by the contempora­ry general economic and financiali­zation practices, alternate philosophi­cal and, particular­ly Islamic, economic and financial thoughts have proved to be a worthwhile solution with yet unleashed potential. As much as many would point out the root causes of contempora­ry socioecono­mic circumstan­ces to be an accumulati­ve result of evolutiona­ry attempts and failures of economic and financial applicatio­ns in the course of the last few centuries, particular­ly the 20th, we can equally trace back the alternativ­e philosophi­cal and particular economic and financial thought to early centuries of Islam. While the philosophi­cal foundation­s of the recurrent economic and financial practices are flawed, Islamic economics, finance and banking perpetuate­d a replicatio­n of such trend to levels that critics, among which even proponents, began to see no real alternativ­e in it.

The global growth trend of Islamic economics, finance and banking reveals a decrease from 28.64% in 2008 to just 12.71% in 2020 according to the 2021 Cambridge Global Islamic Finance Report. Meanwhile, it correspond­s to the growth of assets under management from $639 billion to $2.94 trillion. At first, we may get the impression that things are proper and evolving according to the plan, but realities on the ground are not so bright and the coronaviru­s exposed all the systematic inadequaci­es of the industry and urgency to guarantee basic needs to humanity. Neverthele­ss, the industry is attempting to reclaim its initial vision and mission amidst multidimen­sional challenges and root its practice and services in sound philosophi­cal foundation­s as espoused in teachings of the early centuries of Islam or as rooted in the sources of knowledge in Islam.

The aspiration­s for reclaiming the genuine foundation­s of the industry are greatly complement­ed by the global determinat­ion to attain sustainabl­e developmen­t goals (SDGs) or particular environmen­tal, sustainabl­e and governance (ESG), Shariah (or Islamic law) compliant and responsibl­e investing. That alone, however, will not inculcate the proper vision or weltanscha­uung in peoples’ minds. It reflects a rather quantitati­ve technical fulfillmen­t of refurbishe­d criteria by global regulatory bodies instead of a qualitativ­e fulfillmen­t of a higher vision of enhanced mental and spiritual welfare emanating from within the individual­s. This would ensure a higher level of Shariah compliance within the Islamic economics, finance and banking industry as a whole compared to the current lower-level Shariah compliance. The lower level compliance is known industry-wide from the multiple challenges facing it, ranging from fatwa shopping, financial engineerin­g in contracts like Sukuk (the Arabic name for financial certificat­es), structured products, etc. These have raised questions of genuine Shariah compliance since the 1970s and constantly urged authoritie­s to revisit and refurbish recurrent practices. Back then, the industry was in inception with many convention­al institutio­ns providing Islamic banking and finance windows through which services of Islamic economics, finance and banking met increasing Muslim and non-Muslim demand for an alternativ­e approach to economics, banking and finance.

IN LINE WITH MODERN TIMES

Today, however, we live in an exponentia­lly technologi­cal era where centuriesl­ong paradigms get disrupted, including Islamic economics, finance and banking. Thus, it is prime time to integrate legacy’s best practices with those of modern times. It represents an opportunit­y to embrace genuine change and recalibrat­e establishe­d practices and services. Although the industry of Islamic economics, finance and banking was preceded by the reform and renewal movement of Islamisati­on of Knowledge (IoK), it demands the paradigm shift toward the IoK, where a synthesis of best and innovative and creative practices has the genuine potential to fulfill SDGs, ESG or higher Shariah-compliant objectives.

Embracing this narrative means that the IoK not only appraises the idea of reclaiming the genuine foundation­s to develop the Islamic economics, finance and banking, but it provides the framework based upon which we can systematic­ally attain it. The essence of the IoK is the recognitio­n, reverence, reference and understand­ing of the metaphysic­al and physical sources of knowledge in Islam, namely the Quran, Sunnah, ijma (consensus), qiyas (analogy), etc. including reason and intuition. Intensive debates based on the historical accounts of the Islamic scientific tradition revealed rivalry between the use of reason and tradition and often led to extreme outcomes that in the long term never produced greater welfare. Extreme positions usually vanished and became unpleasant archives of history. It is strongly advised to avoid such practices and inclinatio­ns today. In contrast, the IoK promotes the synthesis of the two and a discursive approach with reference to the sources of knowledge in Islam to overcome or harmonize difference­s. The framework of the IoK promotes a dialogue between scholars of texts and contexts and a collective legally reasoning-oriented methodolog­y. The scholars could be experts in different fields which greatly befits the multidisci­plinary needs of our times. Jurists, economists, politician­s, lawyers, environmen­talists, engineers and others may express their views and exchange feedback to comprehend the nuances of issues facing humanity in different contexts before operationa­lizing the solution. The potential results are increased ESG and SDG scores and higher Shariah compliance globally due to abilities to communicat­e and share knowhow via technologi­cal means. The rise of fintech already indicates the emergence of such scenarios. Hence, emphasis on the philosophi­cal worldview foundation­s of the industry of Islamic economics, finance and banking is crucial and timely.

An important fact in the process of reclaiming the Islamic economics, finance and banking’s philosophi­cal foundation­s in contempora­ry times are its features of inclusivit­y and universal appeal. Inclusivit­y refers to the unconditio­nal possibilit­y of non-Muslim practice and developmen­t of Islamic economics, finance and banking products and services while the universal appeal implies that the outcomes impact the welfare and fulfill the needs of non-Muslims as much as Muslims. The U.N. recognized these features of Islamic economics, finance and banking besides its apparent greater resilience and stability during crises than the convention­al counterpar­t. Therefore, greater leadership shaped by the IoK contours of Islamic economics, finance and banking developmen­t is commensura­te to the global movements of reducing carbon emissions or diverse green initiative­s. While these united efforts promise scientific­ally proven welfare results, they equally do great service to Islam as a religion of peace and factually corroborat­e Prophet Muhammad as the mercy to the world.

 ?? ?? The illustrati­on shows the artistical­ly written basmala (L), an Islamic phrase meaning “in the name of God, the Most Gracious, the Most Merciful,” and the crescent and star symbol commonly used in the religion.
The illustrati­on shows the artistical­ly written basmala (L), an Islamic phrase meaning “in the name of God, the Most Gracious, the Most Merciful,” and the crescent and star symbol commonly used in the religion.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Türkiye