Financial intermediation is the core of the banking business, as its role is to mediate between the owners of surplus funds and those in need of finance, sharing the generated profit with the funds' owners. However, financial intermediation does involve some economic risks in terms of concentration of debt in financial institutions and the possibility of the inability of financed clients to repay their debts. When this happens, financial crises are inevitable, as it occurred in 2008. Islamic finance does not differ in this regard from its traditional counterparts, because the concentration of debts also holds on the concept of Islamic institutional finance, and the possibility of collective default is possible as well. The study treats the issue of financial intermediation and its risks from Maqasidi aspect using home finance as a point of comparison between conventional home finance with Islamic home finance in terms of their economic effects. The study eventually proposes a model for home financing that is free of these cautions. © Author
Year
2020
Country
United States
Language
English
Abstract
English
ISSN/ISBN
978-1799802181
No. of Pages
888
City
Pennsylvania
Edition
1
Select type of work
Name of the Publisher
CIS Program Old
CIS publications
No
CIS Thesis
No
Chapter Pages
834-853
CIS Cluster
QF Thematic Areas
CIS Program
CIS Research Foci