Risk sharing in finance : the Islamic finance alternative / Hossein Askari ... [et al.].
Contributor(s): Askari, Hossein.
Singapore : John Wiley & Sons (Asia) Pte. Ltd., 2012Description: xxiv, 285 p. : ill., charts ; 24 cm.ISBN: 0470829664; 9780470829660.Subject(s): Finance -- Religious aspects -- Islam | Finance -- Islamic countries | Financial services industry -- Risk management -- Islamic countriesGenre/Form: Print books.DDC classification: 332.091767Current location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds |
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On Shelf | HG187.4 .R57 2012 (Browse shelf) | Available | AU0000000001244 |
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HG187.4 .I85 2013 Islamic finance in europe : towards a plural financial system | HG187.4 .M34 2016 Intermediate Islamic finance / | HG187.4 .M64 2017 A socially responsible Islamic finance : character and the common good / | HG187.4 .R57 2012 Risk sharing in finance : the Islamic finance alternative / | HG195 .L83 2018 Dance of the trillions : developing countries and global finance / | HG220.A2 S93 2020 New money : how payment became social media / | HG221 .D63 2014 The social life of money / |
"Glossary of Arabic [financial] terms": p. xix-xxiv.
Series statement from book jacket.
Includes bibliographical references (p. 259-276) and index.
pt. 1. The history and causes of financial crises -- pt. 2. Risk sharing and the Islamic paradigm -- pt. 3. Moving forward.
The financial crisis of 2008 has motivated a number of academics, practitioners and policymakers to question the fundamental stability of the conventional financial system, a system predominantly based on debt financing and leveraging; with the embedded risk that the temptation of leveraging could become excessive, and this combined with the inherent asset-liability mismatch threatens the solvency of financial institutions and overall financial stability. An alternative to the conventional financial system is a system with no debt financing, only equity or direct asset financing; where there would be no "risk shifting" as happens with debt, only "risk sharing" as happens with equity or asset-financing. Financial institutions would be serving their traditional role as intermediaries between savers and investors but with no debt on their balance sheets, no opportunity to engage in leveraging and no predetermined interest rate payments as liabilities. Such a system has been suggested by a number of noted conventional economists over the last hundred years and it is the system whose basic principles have been advocated by Islam and to some extent by other Abrahamic religions. While a number of indicators point to rapid growth in the practice of Islamic finance, much of this growth, to our mind, has been superficial. Instead of developing a risk-sharing-friendly financial system, the practice of Islamic finance has become misaligned to replicating conventional finance. In this volume, the authors make an important attempt to develop the building blocks of an Islamic financial system and elaborate on its implementation as a comprehensive system. They make a convincing case for the world to shed its reliance on debt, interest and leveraging, and revamp the global financial system to rely more heavily on equity financing, genuine asset securitization linking the payoffs of financial securities to the underlying assets, and thus promoting wider risk sharing. --- Inside Flap.