Financial Intermediation, Fintech and Shariah Compliance

Submitted by Umar Farooq Patel on Wed, 08/10/2022 - 16:29
Year
2019
Country
United Kingdom
Language
English
Abstract

This chapter examines how fintech-led financial intermediation would help to solve some key Shari‘ah issues faced by traditional financial intermediation led by banks. Financial intermediation based only on interest-rate mechanisms has obvious limitations as it hampers both investments and employment. The chapter shows that fintech-led financial intermediation would lead to better Shari‘ah compliance and address the issue of financial inclusion as well as better financing of small and medium-sized enterprises (SME) who have hitherto been unable to access mainstream financial market. Fintech is resolving both these issues of moral hazard and information asymmetry. Fintech-led newer marketplaces, like crowdfunding platforms, have enabled an opportunity and an access to capital to businesses/projects, especially the SMEs which would have been unable to do so in the traditional banking, are driven financial intermediation. Fintech provides an opportunity for Islamic financial institutions to increase their equity capital base.

English
ISSN/ISBN
978-1138494800
No. of Pages
374
City
London
Select type of work
Name of the Publisher
CIS publications
Yes
CIS Thesis
No
Status
Pending
Publication Month
June