Riba is referred to more than once in al-Qur'an. An analysis of the references to the term leads one to understand that pre-Islamic riba was an institution through which principal of a loan was multiplied in re-payment. While trade and profit-seeking are allowed in al-Qur'an, riba is unjust and is reflective of profiteering. What is promoted in al-Qur'an, rather than pure revenue-seeking, is cooperation. There is some disagreement as to whether interest in that age was charged only after a certain payment deadline was missed or charged on the loan from the deal's outset. Muslims ought to live in a society of mutual consideration. Such a society, when established, is one in which bank interest is not needed. Until a society is an Islamic one, to abolish interest would be bad for the economy and against the spirit of al-Qur'an and the Sunnah. In line with the ideas of 'graduation' and 'the easing of the way' in Islamic law, the unfair institution of feudalism and other such prac
Year
1978
Country
Pakistan
Language
English
Abstract
English
ISSN/ISBN
0578-8072
No. of Pages
pp.1-43
Number
1
Volume
3
Select type of work
Name of the Journal
CIS Program Old
CIS publications
No
CIS Thesis
No