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Amyaz Moledina

Globalization of Islamic Finance: Myth or Reality? - 0 views

  • The paper addresses various aspects of the globalization of Islamic finance, among others, the issue of the rise of Islamic banking in the West, Islamic jurisprudence and finance, global standards and integration of Islamic finance, and obstacles facing Islamic finance’s integration and growth into the global financial system. One central question asked in this paper is whether the globalization of Islamic finance as a system is even possible
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    Even though Islamic finance is growing fast and the absolute value of this sector is close to $1.2 trillion, that is still only about 2% of world GDP. Can Islamic Finance become a global universal alternative to conventional finance?
Amyaz Moledina

EBSCOhost: The Cultural Political Economy of Islamic Finance - 0 views

  • aims to improve our understanding of the social mechanisms that link financial legitimacy and institutional change. As Max Weber and Karl Polanyi have argued, economic activity is rooted in social relations and collective understandings.
  • a.j.broome@bham.ac.uk
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    The Cultural Political Economy of Islamic Finance.
Amyaz Moledina

Islamic finance: Banking on the ummah | The Economist - 1 views

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    Malaysia has largest market share of Islamic Sukuks. Why? Institutions and market relationships.
Amyaz Moledina

Microfinance in India: Road to redemption | The Economist - 1 views

  • the industry is starting to revive, with regulators in a far more central role. Microlenders are attracting capital again. Grameen Capital India, a social-investment bank, says $144m of equity has been injected into microfinance groups in the past 12 months, more than double the amount in the preceding year. The International Finance Corporation, a multilateral lender, invested $18m in Equitas, a mid-sized group in the southern state of Tamil Nadu. SKS, whose loan book is now worth just $325m, raised $47.5m by issuing shares last year.
  • Microlenders’ annual interest rates are now capped at 10-12 percentage points above their own borrowing costs, leaving most charging 23-27%.
  • microfinance firms are looking beyond small, unsecured loans, which the central bank caps at 50,000 rupees ($910) a pop. Equitas last year set up a subsidiary that sells mortgages to poorer customers. Bandhan has similar plans. P.N. Vasudevan, the managing director of Equitas, says his housing loans, starting at 100,000 rupees, involve lower operating costs, in part because mortgage payments often get transferred via banks and do not require collection.
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    The industry is reviving after SKS fiasco.
Amyaz Moledina

Focus: Islamic finance | The Economist - 1 views

  • THE global market for Islamic finance at the end of last year was worth around $1.3 trillion,
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    Size is 1.3 Trillion in 2012!
theqw90

Zaher and Hassan_A comparative Literature Survey of Islamic Finance and Banking.pdf (ap... - 2 views

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    A literary survey that provides a good, basic (relatively brief) overview of Islamic Banking and its principles.
lucas van cleef

An Introduction to Islamic Finance - Mufti Muhammad Taqi Usmani, Muḥammad Taq... - 0 views

    • lucas van cleef
       
      Musharakah: Financier can suffer from loss and benefit from profitability after giving a loan
Amyaz Moledina

Feminism and Postcolonialism - 1 views

  • Firstly, both discourses are predominantly political and concern themselves with the struggle against oppression and injustice.
  • Moreover, both reject the established hierarchical, patriarchal system, which is dominated by the hegemonic white male, and vehemently deny the supposed supremacy of masculine power and authority. Imperialism, like patriarchy, is after all a phallocentric, supremacist ideology that subjugates and dominates its subjects. The oppressed woman is in this sense akin to the colonized subject. Essentially, exponents of post-colonialism are reacting against colonialism in the political and economic sense while feminist theorists are rejecting colonialism of a sexual nature.
  • Both women and ‘natives' are minority groups who are unfairly defined by the intrusive ‘male gaze' , which is a characteristic of both patriarchy and colonialism.
  • ...3 more annotations...
  • Both peoples have been reduced to stereotypes
  • to what extent this affects the lives of colonial subjects who also happen to be female,
  • In the 1980s, feminist critics Hazel Carby and Sara Suleri began to sense that Western feminism was rooted in a bourgeois, euro-centric prejudice that had to be remedied in order to avoid the continued neglect of the so-called 'Third World woman'. Chandra Talpade Mohanty for one is severely critical of regarding all women as a homogeneous group, without taking into account inevitable differences in ethnicity and circumstance. I would agree that this failure to acknowledge historical specificity is as damaging as other assumptions based in chauvinism and ignorance
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    A nice summary that relates feminism to post colonial discourses. A few questions come to mind. How have women in the experience of micro finance been "colonized"?
Jonathan Huisel

Old Order Amish Helping Fund - 1 views

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    Financial details about the non-profit orgainization known as the Amish Helping Fund. It gives a quick definition of the group and some of the financial advantages given to the Amish community.
lucas van cleef

EBSCOhost: The Economic Crisis, Capitalism and Islam: The Making of a New Economic Ord... - 1 views

    • lucas van cleef
       
      Most thorough article on subject. Page 109-111 in particular breakdown the various types of loans that can be given based on a Musharakah loan system. The variety of different type of loans available vastly increases the incentive for different types of borrowers to take part in Islamic finance.
Amyaz Moledina

Poverty: The audacity of hope | The Economist - 0 views

  • The idea of such poverty traps has a long and distinguished intellectual heritage, but Ms Duflo's provocative argument was that her research and that of others showed that a profound lack of hope—and not just capital, credit, skills, or food—could create and sustain a poverty trap.
  • Bandhan, an Indian microfinance institution, worked with people who lived in extreme penury. They were reckoned to be unable to handle the demands of repaying a loan. Instead, Bandhan gave each of them a small productive asset—a cow, a couple of goats or some chickens. It also provided a small stipend to reduce the temptation to eat or sell the asset immediately, as well as weekly training sessions to teach them how to tend to animals and manage their households. Bandhan hoped that there would be a small increase in income from selling the products of the farm animals provided, and that people would become more adept at managing their own finances.The results were far more dramatic. Well after the financial help and hand-holding had stopped, the families of those who had been randomly chosen for the Bandhan programme were eating 15% more, earning 20% more each month and skipping fewer meals than people in a comparison group. They were also saving a lot. The effects were so large and persistent that they could not be attributed to the direct effects of the grants: people could not have sold enough milk, eggs or meat to explain the income gains. Nor were they simply selling the assets (although some did).
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    A productive assets and a supportive framework can help people move out of a poverty trap.
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