Islamic Banking

April 3, 2008

Cash waqf for welfare projects mooted

Professor M.A. Mannan, founder chairman of Social Investment Bank (SIB) in Bangladesh, yesterday urged Muslim countries and organizations to promote "cash waqf" (endowment in cash) as a new product to collect funds required for their educational, social and charitable projects.

"The main attraction of this product is that it enables every Muslim to participate in it by contributing any amount he or she can afford," Mannan told Arab News while attending the 7th International Conference on Islamic Economics at the King Abdul Aziz University.

Mannan, former chief economist at the Islamic Development Bank in Jeddah, said contributions to cash waqf could be collected through banks. "We have introduced cash waqf at SIB and have received encouraging response from the public," he said. Bank Muamalat and other Islamic banks in Indonesia have also adopted the system. "We don’t use cash waqf funds directly to finance projects. The fund will be invested in viable ventures and the returns from projects will be used to finance projects. This will help organizations to maintain funds for their projects without resorting to contributions," he explained.

Mannan said SIB had made 300 percent growth during the past 10 years. "I hope SIB would pave the way for the establishment of a world social bank in order to finance social infrastructure projects for the Ummah."

The conference was officially opened on Tuesday by acting Higher Education Minister Dr. Matlab Al-Nafeesa. He said the economic problems facing the humanity today were the results of its distancing itself from Islamic teachings and values. He hoped that the conference would open a new chapter in Islamic economics research. The minister honored eminent economists who had contributed to the development of Islamic Economics Research Center at the university.

Dr. Osama Tayyeb, president of KAU, stressed the conference’s significance in exchanging expertise and making use of research works.

Speaking to Arab News, Dr. Najatullah Siddiqui, winner of King Faisal International Prize for Islamic Studies, called for more efforts to promote Islamic endowment and Zakah systems and fight poverty in Muslim countries. Siddiqui emphasized the need for narrowing the gap between the rich and poor and reminded the wealthy of their duty toward the less fortunate. He presented a paper on "Obstacles to Research in Islamic Economics."

Dr. Mehmet Asutay, lecturer in political economy at School of Government and International Affairs, Durham University, was one of the nearly 1,000 delegates attending the conference. His school, which offers training in Islamic finance, has a pavilion at the conference along with other major players in the industry including Harvard Law School and the Islamic Development Bank.

"There is a lot of demand for our Ph.D and master degree programs in Islamic finance," Asutay told Arab News. He also disclosed the university’s plan to open a center for Islamic finance studies. "We provide short-term courses for employees of Islamic banks and other financial institutions. Last year we provided training to more than 40 people from different countries including Australia, Germany, Italy and Switzerland. Half of them were non-Muslims." Asutay said Islamic economics was making "impressive" progress over the past years. However, he emphasized the importance of developing authentic Islamic finance products to meet the needs of different societies.

"Islamic banking has to move from commercial banking to social and retail banking. It should also get involved in social issues such as environment protection." He called for concrete efforts to establish transparency.

Professor Mohamed Aslam Haneef of International Islamic University in Malaysia was one of the speakers yesterday. He called for the establishment of an international fund for research in Islamic economics. "Students of Islamic universities should become agents of change, not changed agents," Haneef said. "We should also chart a clear agenda for the future," he told the delegates who came from all over the world including the US, UK, Egypt, Pakistan, India, Indonesia, Malaysia, Australia and New Zealand.

Source

Gulf banks set sights on Kenya

Gulf conventional and Islamic banks are looking to set up operations in Kenya to capitalise on the huge untapped Muslim population in the Africa region, said a senior Kenyan central bank official.
“We are getting a lot of inquiries from Gulf banks, some of them from the UAE, which are keen to open up branches in Kenya,” Central Bank of Kenya Governor Prof Njuguna Ndung’u told Emirates Business. He didn’t identify the regional banks. “We are keen to make Kenya the region’s banking hub. Nairobi’s strategic location makes it an ideal place for Islamic banks to easily access the Muslim-populated Eastern and Central African regions,” he said.
The Governor visited the UAE over the past two days to attract investment into the banking and financial sector. He will also visit Oman and Bahrain.
“I see strong growth in the Kenyan banking sector – particularly Islamic banking. There is a huge market niche in Islamic banking that needs to be filled… and it provides great opportunity for the Gulf banks to fill that gap,” said Ndung’u.
Kenya’s first Islamic bank – Gulf African Bank – was launched last month by Middle Eastern investors with a capital base of $27 million (Dh99m). UAE-based investment firm GulfCap, Dubai-based private equity firm Istithmar World, BankMuscat International, PTA Bank and other Kenyan and foreign investors are the major shareholders of the Islamic bank.
Gulf African plans to offer corporate banking, housing finance, car finance, retail banking products as well as other services that conform with the tenets of Islam.
The Kenyan Central Bank has also approved a second licence for an Islamic bank that will launch operations soon. Ndung’u said Kenyan banks lack innovative and diverse Shariah-compliant products and the entry of foreign banks will expand this segment.
“Gulf banks are very matured compared to their Kenyan counterparts. The entry of Gulf Islamic banks into Kenya will see new innovative products.”
In fact, the banking sector was the largest contributor to the GDP growth in Kenya last year.

Singapore to host Islamic Financial Services Board’s 2009 summit

SINGAPORE: Singapore will host the annual summit of the Islamic Financial Services Board in May next year.

It will be the first time the event will be held in Asia. Previous summits were held in London, Doha, Beirut and Dubai. This year’s summit will be held in Amman.

The annual summit is the single largest concentration of top financial regulators from IFSB member countries taking part in an industry-led event.

Singapore will play host to central bank governors, top executives of securities and insurance regulators, and major private sector participants, who will discuss key issues and developments on the regulation and supervision of Islamic financial services.

The IFSB is the international standard-setting organisation that promotes the soundness and stability of the Islamic financial industry.

The IFSB currently has 163 members, comprising 41 banking, securities and insurance regulatory and supervisory authorities, six international organisations and 116 market players and professional firms from over 31 jurisdictions worldwide.

Hosting the event will underscore Singapore’s role as an international financial centre, says the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS). And it comes amid a push to develop the fast-growing Islamic financial sector in Singapore.

Singapore is gearing up to offer more Shariah-compliant products and services as part of efforts to tap into the industry, currently valued at US$750 billion and growing by over 20 percent annually.

In recent years, Singapore has taken steps to level the playing field between Islamic financing and conventional financing deals.

But the MAS notes that there is currently a shortage of expertise in the area.

Tai Boon Leong, MAS executive director, said: "As the Islamic industry develops, we foresee that there will be a need for adequate supply of talent and expertise in Shariah-compliant concepts and structuring as well as Shariah law.

"We urge more training institutes and other ancilliary service providers to offer such training… MAS will work with interested parties to tie up with local educational institutes and bodies to offer such programmes here."

Mr Tai was speaking at the inaugural Singapore Islamic Finance News Forum on Wednesday.

According to some industry players, the opportunities for Islamic financial activities in Singapore are huge.

CIMB Islamic Bank’s CEO, Badlisyah Abdul Ghani, said: "Islamic financial market is not just confined to capital market - it is banking, it is ‘takaful’ which is Islamic insurance, it is wealth management, it is asset management.

"Singapore has a lot of value proposition in these activities. It’s a matter of choosing which one to do first, and eventually to end up with a full spectrum of Islamic financial activities in Singapore."

Source: Channel News Asia






















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