Bloomsbury Qatar Foundation Journals

Place
Doha
country
Qatar
Language
English
Publisher ID
941

Islamic Finance and Economic Growth- The Malaysian Case

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Thu, 08/22/2019 - 16:20

Does Islamic Finance influence growth? The aim of this paper is to investigate empirically the impact of the Islamic Bank Financing on Malaysia’s economic growth over the period 2000Q1– 2011Q4. The hypotheses addressed in this study are discussed within the framework of DemirgüçKunt & Levine/Chapra approach and the analysis of the Islamic Banking system. A neoclassical production function augmented by some indicators of the Islamic bank financing has been the theoretical framework of our empirical investigations.

Economic and Financial Crises in Fifteenth-century Egypt: Lessons from the History

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Thu, 08/22/2019 - 16:20

A study is made of the economic and financial crises of fifteenth-century Egypt, which was ruled by the Mamluk dynasty. During the fifteenth century, especially the first half, Egypt faced terrible economic crises caused sometimes by the ill-governance and corruption of rulers, and sometimes by natural catastrophes such as the flooding or drying up of the Nile, outbreaks of epidemics, crop diseases, etc. In many cases two or more factors existed simultaneously. Financial crises emanated mainly from monetary mismanagement.

The Importance of the Islamic Banks in the Monetary Transmission Mechanism in Malaysia

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Thu, 08/22/2019 - 16:20

Monetary policy influences the real economy through various channels, including bank lending. Currently, Malaysia is operating under dual banking systems: conventional and Islamic banking. The latter has the distinctive feature of interest-free. Hence, this study aims to empirically explore the relevance of Islamic banks’ financing in channeling the monetary policy effects to the real economy.

The Transmission of Monetary Policy through Conventional and Islamic Banks

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Thu, 08/22/2019 - 16:20

We investigate the differences in banks’ responses to monetary policy shocks across bank size, liquidity, and type, i.e., conventional versus Islamic, in Pakistan between 2002:III and 2010:I. We find that following a monetary contraction, small banks with liquid balance sheets cut their lending less than other small banks. In contrast large banks maintain their lending irrespective of their liquidity positions. Islamic banks, though similar in size to small banks, respond to monetary policy shocks as large banks.

The Effect of Scarcity Thinking on Human Wants among Muslims: Exploring the Ideological Orientation of the Concept of Scarcity

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Thu, 08/22/2019 - 16:20

Mainstream economics postulates the concept of scarcity as a defining notion, while heterodox economics denies the proposition of scarcity. In contrast, there is no clear stand among Islamic economists towards the concept of scarcity. This paper explores the concept of scarcity ideologically and examines empirically the effect of scarcity thinking on human wants. The concept of scarcity is one of the unresolved issues in Islamic economics.

Islamic Economics as a New Economic Paradigm

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Thu, 08/22/2019 - 16:20

The more recent literature on Islamic economics is largely about Islamic financial instruments and institutions. It might give the impression that the main difference between conventional and Islamic economics is in the instrumental part, rather than fundamental aspects. Islamic economics is not about the prohibition of certain goods and services. It is a vastly different economic system whose answers to the core economic questions vary significantly. As is currently done, mimicking conventional economics and finance is only creating Islamic economics and finance by name.

Methodology of Islamic Economics; Typology of Current Practices, Evaluation and Way Forward

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Thu, 08/22/2019 - 16:20

The sustainable development of Islamic economics as a discipline depends also on methodological development that provides a clear direction on how to appraise economic theories and provide evidence of its reliability. This paper attempts to study the methodology of Islamic economics in two ways: (1) by examining the works by scholars in their specific writings on this subject, and (2) by observing the writings on Islamic economics, banking and finance to see how Islamic economists develop their discipline.