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Faith based banking in a country which has secularism enshrined in its constitution! Does not it sound anachronous?
Well, as far as the present dispensation at the Centre led by BJP is concerned – which has an altogether different take on secularism – it does not seem to think so. And that’s why it has gladly accepted the proposal by the Saudi Arabia based Islamic Development Bank (IDB) – an international investment organisation – to start its operations here.
In fact this proposal is considered a positive outcome of PM Modi’s visit to Saudi Arabia sometime back (April 2016). Although a date has not been announced when the Bank would start its operations here, all the formalities regarding its launching have been completed and even the city for its first branch in India has been identified. Ahmedabad would see the first branch of this Bank.
We are also told that India’s state-owned Exim Bank would extend around US $100 million as credit to IDB to facilitate exports to its member countries. The bank – which has 56 Islamic states as its shareholders, while Saudi Arabia holds around a quarter of its shares, UAE is its fifth biggest shareholder – also plans to contribute towards medical treatment of rural poor in India. It plans to donate 350 medical vans as part of its social initiative
How is India which is definitely not part of the Islamic World being considered by IDB to start its operations? The deciding factor is its 180 million-strong Muslim population which has made it an attractive place for the IDB to set its shop here. The Reserve Bank of India has already given a green signal to this proposal sometime back and paved the way for Sharia-compliant, interest free or Islamic banking in the country. In fact in late December last year itself an RBI committee on ‘Medium-Term Path for Financial Inclusion’ headed by Deepak Mohanty had recommended that there should also be “interest free windows” in existing banks.
The main argument put forward by the committee was that globally interest-free banking, which is also known as Islamic banking has witnessed a significant increase, especially in the wake of the financial crisis. Islamic finance assets have seen a ten-fold increase from a decade ago and today are estimated at around US Dollars 2 trillion.
It had explained that the “central concept in interest-free banking and finance as justice” is supposed to be achieved mainly through the “sharing of risk”. Under it different stakeholders share profits and losses and charging interest is prohibited.
Explaining the key elements which give interest free banking a distinct identity it had talked of the following:
(ii) Haram/halal: A strict code of ‘ethical investments’ operates for interest-free financial activities. Such investment to give priority to the production of essential goods that satisfy the needs of the population, such as food, clothing, shelter, health and education;
(iii) Ghrarar/maysir: Gambling in all forms is prohibited. Another feature condemned under interest-free banking is economic transactions involving elements of speculation;
(iv) Zakat: This is the most important instrument for the redistribution of wealth in the form of a compulsory levy.
Remember, till date interest-free banking has witnessed a lukewarm response in India. During the UPA regime, RBI had clearly declined to move further on the issue. In fact, in the year 2007 the RBI working group under the then executive director, Anand Sinha, had recommended that India must not permit Islamic banks to operate in the country. It had emphasised that current regulations do not permit the model.
However, internally a debate was already on within the banking establishment about the prospects of such a scheme. A report published in the April-June 2005 issue of RBI Legal News and Views outlines the fact that “interest-free banking is an attractive proposition gaining currency all over the world and so it was time India introduced it:
What are the regulations which seemed to obstruct the establishment of Islamic banking?
The Banking Regulation Act (1949) has provisions which clearly prohibit operation of banks on a profit-loss basis (5b); they also forbid what is known as murabaha, or, the buying, selling, or barter of goods (8), impede ijara, or, bar the holding of immovable property for a period greater than seven years (9), and requires the payment of interest (21).
The idea to start Islamic banking in India received a fresh boost when the National Minorities Commission, then under the chairmanship of Wajahat Habibullah, asked the finance ministry to take a relook at it. It is a different matter that RBI, then under the governorship of D Subbarao, again declined to move further on the issue, once again underlining the fact that existing banking rules do not allow interest free banking.
Towards the end of UPA II regime, the scenario witnessed a change with the RBI allowing a non-bank finance company in Kerala to start its operations in Sharia-compliant mode. Looking back one also discovers that ‘The Raghuram Rajan Committee on Financial Sector Reform (2008)’ had also considered interest-free banking,
It was the same period in which a petition was filed in the Kerala High Court challenging the operations of this finance company on the ground that a “[f]inancial services company set up with government participation which would follow the canon law of a particular religion is a clear instance of the state favouring a particular religion”. (Dr. Subrahmaniam Swamy v. State of Kerala represented by chief secretary and others, W.P. (C) No. 35180 of 2009, High Court of Kerala, Ernakulam).
A counter-affidavit was filed by TP Thomas Kutty, the then deputy general manager (Projects) of KSIDC which argued that the establishment of such an institution is “aligned to industrial development in Kerala”. It also stated that it is basically meant to target untapped Gulf money which could only be invested in a Shariah-compliant bank. Although the high court initially stayed the government move broadly concurring with views of the petitioner, in its final decision it dismissed the petition observing that “although the institution was based on the principles of a religion, its motive was not to propagate the religion and the state’s participation in it was purely based on commercial prospects.” (The Times of India, February 4, 2011, p. 1).
2.
As of now, barring some rabid rightwing commentaries there is not much discussion in the mainstream media about introduction of ‘faith based banking’ in the country. Instead we witness purely economic arguments being put forward supposedly to justify this debatable move. It is being argued how leading multinational banks are also engaged in tapping this ‘market’ and introducing products suitable for Islamic banking or how worldwide it is growing at a faster rate vis-a-vis standard banks. Sample this report which appeared in a publication:
Would it suffice if the debate continues in similar fashion, where rabid right-wingers – who have no qualms equating Islam with terror, challenge it on similar grounds – or at the other end of the spectrum economists singing paeans to its advantages of attracting hitherto untapped funds? Perhaps there has to be a third way to look at the whole phenomenon.
And it should begin by raising broadly three categories of questions:
– how countries which call themselves Islamic look at this proposition. Are they ready to convert their modern banking system into Islamic Banking or have kept their efforts at a symbolic level only?
– whether this move would prove really beneficial for those Muslims who are financially excluded or would it pave the way for their further pauperisation.
It is important to note that the very idea of Islamic banking and promoting it as a parallel to conventional banking – which is being portrayed as un-Islamic – and which has caught the imagination of a section of god-fearing Muslims, is a clear manifestation of shifts in Muslim politics the world over. One can look at the debates in colonial India between Muslim scholars when modern banking was being introduced and a section of the ulema who objected to it on the basis of their understanding of Islamic principles. In his important intervention on the subject Ather Farouqui tells us (Islamic Banking in India at the Service of Pan-Islamists, MAINSTREAM, VOL L, NO 11, MARCH 3, 2012):
He also quotes,
A major exception to the unfolding discourse seemed to be Maulana Abul Ala Maududi (1903-79) founder of Jamaat-e-Islami. For him Shariah-compliant financial practices were part of the larger project of Islamism who sought to overwhelm every aspect of the state and society by the medieval norms enshrined in Shariah law. The idea had not many takers till late sixties or early seventies which received a boost by Saudi oil wealth in the 1970s.
According to Sadanand Dhume,
Dhume’s article which was written when SBI had initiated a Sharia-compliant fund (end of 2014) also poses few basic questions which cannot be brushed aside easily. He asks:
3.
Faruoqui’s article also discusses the experience of Islamic countries. According to him in Saudi Arabia, banks are involved in charging and paying interest. The only difference from other modern/conventional banking is that they ‘employ semantics’; instead of using the term interest they use the terms profit-loss sharing. Looking at the fact that it is an oil-rich economy, banks there rarely face losses and the depositors ‘share the profits’ which is not considered ‘riba’ (usury).
The most interesting case vis-a-vis Islamic banking pertains to Pakistan. Here few years back Islamists demanded to overhaul the conventional/modern banking system for an end to the interest paying system. The Federal Shariat Court also ruled in favour but the government did not take it up in the legislature. When the matter went to Supreme Court, it set aside the judgement and the matter is still pending. Ather Farouqui writes,
Providing details of judicial intervention he further tells us that Pakistan’s Supreme Court in a judgement (PLD 2000 SC 225) held that the country’s current interest-based system needs to be replaced with one that is Shariah-compliant, but when a review petition was filed (PLD 2002 SC 801) this judgement was suspended and the courts forwarded it to the Federal Shariat Court for reconsideration, which is still pending there. The challenge to deal with the issue is not theological; it is pure economic.
Unlike Saudi Arabia, Pakistan is not oil-rich and is dependent on international aid like its many other third-world counter-parts. And thus the ulema may cry hoarse about replacing an interest-based economy with a Shariah-compliant one, but for Pakistan to remain part of international financial system it will have to service the debts from time to time and it cannot be done if its economy fully switches to interest free regime. Justice Wajihuddin Ahmed clearly spelled it out in PLD 2000 SC 780–1. (Excerpted from Islamic Banking in India at the Service of Pan-Islamists, MAINSTREAM, VOL L, NO 11, MARCH 3, 2012)
4.
Last but not the least one also needs to look at the claim that Islamic banking would augment financial inclusion of those (Muslims) who have remained aloof from conventional banking systems for various reasons. It is true that a huge section of the Muslim population has been left out of the ambit of banking services. Sachar commission had rightly noted,
This financial exclusion could be considered a culmination of various factors. It has to do with the fact that majority of the population is poor and engaged in informal sector. It is also because of a certain mindset prevailing in the banking sector, which has categorised Muslims and Muslim-dominated areas as “negative zones” (which is documented in the Sachar report) and also for reasons of faith.
It is worth noting that because of educational backwardness of a large number of Indian Muslims or the stranglehold of Islamist thinking even among a section of the educated ones, this particular issue of bank interest has become a live issue among the community. A measure of it can be had from a report of the Reserve Bank of India itself (April-June 2005 issue of RBI Legal News and Views) which has rather prompted it to revisit its earlier policy of not having anything to do with Islamic or interest free banking,
An important fallout of this thinking is that a number of ‘Islamic banking’ organisations have come up in areas where the population is predominantly Muslim where unscrupulous elements – who are able to derive support from a section of the clergy – are able to hoodwink the ordinary Muslim masses in very many ways. For example, the simplest way in which they do this is by gathering monies from gullible masses, investing a significant portion of the same in conventional commercial banks, and use the interest for personal aggrandisement and return the original amount back to the investors when needed or demanded without any addition.
The Milli Gazette has time and again reported activities of another type of fraudsters who had robbed ordinary Muslims of their precious savings under the name of ‘Islamic investment’.
Another fraud in the long chain of fraud after fraud. Again hundreds of people have been left robbed of their precious little savings made in a life time. Another fraud in the name of ‘Islamic investment.’ Delhi-based Al-Fahad investment group downed its shutters in the densely Muslim populated area of Okhla and left investors high and dry. It is not the first instance when a non-banking investment company collecting millions of rupees in the name of Islamic and halal investment schemes has bolted with no trace. ..According to a brochure of the company, Al-Fahad worked on the principle of participation in profits. The amount invested by people, a group or trust in different schemes was to be utilized to finance various profitable ventures. The profit so earned was to be shared among investors and the company (in the ratio of 80:20). ..
Four years later it reported about another incident:
New “al-Falah” on the prowl
While a sizable number of Muslim investors are still recuperating from the scars inflicted by Al-Falah brand of “Islamic” financial sharks, we now have another “al-” brand of companies claiming to be an associate of a multinational Islamic finance group. Unlike Al-Falah, this group has adopted another route for harassing poor Muslims.
The company is Al-Barr Finance House (formerly known as Al Baraka Finance House Limited) headquartered at Mumbai and branches in Andheri, Azamgarh, Aligarh, Bhiwandi, Chennai, New Delhi and Kanpur according to its website .. Al-Barr’s modus operandi is that it would approach local traders with an option to finance their business in Islam-permitted methods. People are told they will get rid of the cumbersome and time-consuming procedures normally adopted in conventional finances. In the name of helping them “avoid” the blight of riba and reap Barakah here and in the Hereafter, victims end up paying more than 50 percent interest in the disguise of “Islamically” permissible Murabahah. ..
Perhaps one needs to revisit the claim that Islamic Banking would prove to be an antidote to financial exclusion of Muslims from conventional banking. As the above examples – which have been randomly selected – demonstrate, there is a greater possibility that it can instead become a new vehicle for further squeezing them of interest (from their hard earned money) or in worst cases of the money itself.
To conclude, the not so silent introduction of Islamic Banking in India has once again exposed BJP’s double standards.
There was a time when BJP attacked the Congress for its tendency to equate secularism with pandering to the concerns of the most orthodox elements among Muslims. It had even coined a term for it: ‘appeasement’. If one goes to the kernel of the argument regarding Islamic banking one can similarly see that, stripped of financial complexities, at its core this is what it represents. Yet today the BJP is going gaga over it and has no qualms in becoming a pall bearer of Maududi’s worldview, rather vindicating the oft repeated dictum that fundamentalisms of various kinds feed on each other.