The changing political scene in North Africa is resulting in a much greater interest in Islamic finance and what it has to offer. The modern practice of Islamic finance started in Egypt with the Mit Ghamr experiment of 1963. Such project had a strong focus on development and provided micro-savings and micro-loans before microfinance was conceptualized as such in the 1970s. Nowadays, Egypt has the potential to develop a new homegrown model focused on development that could avoid cosmetic “Islamic†finance. Profit & loss sharing formulas can make both Islamic finance and Islamic microfinance real alternatives to both conventional finance and microfinance that can address new niches of population and promote entrepreneurship and SMEs. It is estimated that by 2020, the North African region needs to create 75 million jobs. In this context, the promotion of entrepreneurship and micro-entrepreneurship might be the only effective vehicle for economic development.
Year
2013
Country
Turkey
Language
English
Abstract
English
City
Istanbul
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Conf. End Date
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CIS Program Old
CIS publications
No
CIS Thesis
No