Connect with us

EDITORIAL

Waqf-Based Qardhul Hassan Should Be Given An Opening

Published

on

Spread the love

Waqf-based Qardhul Hassan is a financial instrument that provides interest-free loans to the needy, funded by waqf (endowment) funds. While it has the potential to promote financial inclusion and social welfare, several challenges need to be addressed to ensure the successful implementation and sustainability of this practice. The need for waqf-based qardhul hassan in our contemporary times can not be over emphasized.

Firstly, it provides interest-free financing. Islam prohibits the charging of interest on loans as it is considered exploitative and harmful to society. Waqf-based Qardhul Hassan provides a mechanism for interest-free financing to meet the basic needs of daily life;

Secondly, it supports livelihood. Waqf-based Qardhul Hassan can be used to provide financing to people in need, especially those who are facing financial difficulties. The funds can be used to support micro-enterprises, provide education and training, or meet basic needs such as food and shelter;

Third, it facilitates community development. Waqf-based Qardhul Hassan can also be used to support community development projects such as community gardens, kindergartens, community halls, village libraries, bridges and animal shelters, to name a few. By providing interest-free financing, waqf-based qardhul hassan can help ensure that these projects are accessible to the entire community, regardless of their financial status; and

Fourth, it leads to wealth preservation. Waqf-based Qardhul Hassan allows individuals to donate their wealth to charitable causes while preserving the principal amount of their donation. By endowing their wealth as waqf, individuals can ensure that it is used for charitable purposes in perpetuity, rather than being consumed or dissipated over time.

Despite the benefits of the waqf-based Qardhul Hassan, there are at least five challenges that need to be considered carefully when offering this facility to eligible Malaysians.

The first challenge is the limited access to acquiring the funds. One of the main challenges of waqf-based qardhul hassan is the limited availability of waqf funds to finance the loans. The number of available funds can vary widely depending on the type of waqf and its management practices. This can result in insufficient funds to meet the demand for qardhul hassan loans, especially in areas with high demand and limited supply of waqf funds;

The second is administrative difficulties. When offered, waqf-based qardhul hassan requires careful administration and monitoring to ensure that loans are given to those who are in need and can repay the loan. This can be a challenge, particularly in areas with weak governance structures or where corruption is rife. There may also be legal and regulatory hurdles to overcome, such as complex documentation requirements or conflicting regulations;

Third, there are human barriers. Some communities may not be comfortable with the concept of borrowing, particularly from a charitable or religious organization. This can lead to limited uptake of waqf-based qardhul hassan, based on their misconceptions about its potential benefits. They have built their spectrum away from the permissibility of the primary sources;

The fourth is a lack of awareness. Lack of awareness about Waqf-based Qardhul Hassan and its benefits is another major challenge. Many people, especially in rural areas, may not be aware of the existence of waqf funds or the possibility of obtaining interest-free loans through them. It is also a mystery that this facility has the same legal implications as existing tawarruq financing and conventional loans. Unlike tawarruq financing and conventional loans, waqf-based qardhul hassan is a beautiful loan, only the principal is returned to the creditor. If there is any extra, it is a voluntary gift from the debtor to the creditor; and

The last is its sustainability. Ensuring the sustainability of waqf-based qardhul hassan is crucial for its long-term success. This requires careful management of waqf funds, as well as strategies to increase demand for loans and diversify funding sources. In addition, the practice may face challenges from changing social and economic conditions, such as changes in government policy, economic crises, or natural disasters.

Overall, the waqf-based qardhul hassan, which has been excluded from the offerings of Islamic banks, should now be allowed to regain its potential for social benefit. The benefits of this facility can pave the way. A multi-stakeholder strategy needed to curb the aforementioned issues should be unveiled to enable the formation of the implementation and sustainability of waqf-based qardhul hassan to society at large.


Spread the love
Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

EDITORIAL

Africa’s Call for Global Unity in Resource Mobilization for Development and Climate Action

Published

on

By

Spread the love

By Ismail D. Osman

African leaders have issued a compelling call to the international community, urging them to fulfill their obligations in light of the Paris Summit for a New Global Financing Pact. This pact emphasizes that no nation should ever be compelled to make a difficult choice between their development goals and taking decisive action against climate change.

Under the guidance of President William Ruto and AU Commission Chairperson Moussa Faki, these leaders have passionately appealed to development partners, urging them to synchronize their technical expertise and financial resources with the aim of fostering the sustainable utilization of Africa’s abundant natural resources.

The African leaders made a heartfelt plea to global leaders to seriously consider the proposition of establishing a comprehensive global carbon taxation system. They emphasized the importance of such a regime in addressing the urgent challenges of climate change.

The leaders passionately advocated for the provision of affordable and easily accessible financing options for investments that contribute to positive climate outcomes. Their call aimed to ensure that financial barriers do not hinder the implementation of crucial climate-friendly projects.

In a world grappling with the urgent challenges of climate change and economic development, Africa’s clarion call for collective global action in resource mobilization couldn’t be timelier. The continent, home to diverse cultures, abundant natural resources, and a burgeoning population, stands at a critical crossroads. Its quest for sustainable development and climate resilience resonates not only as a continental priority but as a global imperative.

Africa’s plea for a united front in resource mobilization is underpinned by two intersecting crises. First, there’s the pressing need for economic development to alleviate poverty, reduce inequality, and improve the standard of living for its citizens. Secondly, the existential threat of climate change looms large, disproportionately affecting African nations with erratic weather patterns, rising sea levels, and increased instances of droughts and floods.

To address these intertwined challenges, Africa is taking proactive steps. The African Union’s Agenda 2063 outlines a comprehensive framework for the continent’s transformation. It emphasizes the need for sustainable development, including industrialization, infrastructure development, and job creation, all while advancing environmental sustainability. Africa recognizes that fostering economic growth without mitigating climate change will be a Pyrrhic victory.

However, the daunting task of financing these ambitious goals remains. Africa’s own domestic resources are valuable but often insufficient. Foreign direct investment, aid, and loans have historically played a significant role, but they come with their own set of challenges, including debt burdens and conditionalities. Thus, the clarion call for global collaboration in resource mobilization is born out of necessity.

The international community must respond to Africa’s plea with a sense of urgency and solidarity. First and foremost, the global community must reaffirm its commitment to the Paris Agreement and provide tangible support for African countries to meet their climate targets. This includes financial aid for adaptation and mitigation efforts, as well as technology transfer and capacity-building initiatives.

Furthermore, international financial institutions and donor countries should explore innovative financing mechanisms tailored to Africa’s needs. Debt relief, green bonds, and public-private partnerships are avenues worth exploring to mobilize the necessary resources. Additionally, fostering trade partnerships that benefit African economies can stimulate economic growth and generate revenue.

Africa’s call for collective action should not be perceived as a one-sided appeal for assistance. The continent offers immense opportunities for investment, innovation, and sustainable business ventures. By engaging in mutually beneficial partnerships, the global community can contribute to Africa’s development while simultaneously advancing their own interests.

Africa’s call for collective global action in resource mobilization is a plea for unity in addressing shared challenges. It’s a call to recognize that the fate of the continent is intrinsically linked to the fate of the planet. By working together to support Africa’s development and climate resilience efforts, the world can demonstrate its commitment to a more equitable and sustainable future for all. Africa’s voice must be heard, and its call must be answered with concrete action.

Ismail D. Osman is a former Deputy Director of Somalia National Intelligence & Security Agency (NISA) – Writes in Somalia, Horn of Africa Security and Geopolitical focusing on governance and security.

Courtesy: Modern Diplomacy


Spread the love
Continue Reading

EDITORIAL

We Face Neither East nor West; We Face Forward.

Published

on

By

Spread the love

The first summit of the Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) convened in Belgrade, Yugoslavia on 1 September 1961. Under the leadership of Jawaharlal Nehru of India, Sukarno of Indonesia, Gamal Abdel Nasser of Egypt, Kwame Nkrumah of Ghana and Josep Broz Tito of Yugoslavia, the week-long summit brought together delegates from 25 countries who strove for a collective foreign policy premised in peaceful coexistence. “Unwilling to remain hostages to nuclear warfare and to nuclear detente, the new states of the 1950s wanted to chart out an independent path — not as proxies for an American-Soviet Cold War,” writes Indian historian and PI Council member Vijay Prashad.

In the latter half of the 20th century, this alternative formation, which came to represent two-thirds of the world’s population, sought to drive an agenda against imperialist domination and colonial subjugation. A criteria for invitations to the Belgrade Summit was developed in Cairo in June, 1961. In addition to their “independent foreign policy”, invited nations “offered consistent support to national Independence movements” and were not “members of multilateral military alliances”. The journey to Belgrade, however, began decades earlier.

After the October Revolution of 1917, Indian Communist NM Roy predicted the “awakening of the East.” Three years later, the Congress of ‘The Peoples of the East’ brought 1,900 delegates to Baku, Azerbaijan, where they committed to struggle for a life “based on equality, freedom and brotherhood.” As millions won their emancipation from colonialism in the decades that followed, the call from Baku echoed towards Bandung, where the Conference of Afro-Asian Peoples opened in 1955.

The Bandung Conference grappled with issues common to the peoples of both continents: sovereignty, racism, nationalism and anti-colonial struggle. President Sukarno, who led Indonesia’s struggle for independence, called on conference delegates to “inject the voice of reason into world affairs and mobilize all the spiritual, all the moral, all the political strength of Asia and Africa.” His demand found expression in Belgrade six years later with the founding of the Non-Aligned Movement.

Opening the summit in the Yugoslav capital, Tito said that small and medium-sized countries “were looked upon… as a kind of voting machine in international forums such as the United Nations and others. This gathering of the highest representatives of non-aligned countries illustrates, however, that such outdated practices must be discarded, that non-aligned countries can no longer reconcile themselves with the status of observers and that, in their opinion, they have the right to participate in solving problems, particularly those which endanger the peace and the fate of the world at the present moment. This meeting has been convened to assert that right.”

Aiming to build a movement of solidarity strong enough to assert members’ interests on the world stage, the NAM grew in strength. When the Belgrade summit closed, Nehru and Nkrumah travelled to Moscow while Sukarno and Mali’s Modibo Keïta left for Washington. They carried an ‘Appeal For Peace’ to the major powers, asking them to return to the negotiating table from the brink of nuclear war.

By the Movement’s 5th Summit in Sri Lanka, 1976, 86 countries were members of the NAM. This upsurge followed the decision to take up the fight for a New International Economic Order during the 1970s. At their Fourth Summit in Algiers, 1973, the NAM declared that, despite the trend in the international situation toward detente, imperialism continues to hamper the “economic and social progress of developing countries but also adopts an aggressive attitude towards those who oppose its plans, trying to impose upon them political, social and economic structures which encourage alien domination, dependence and neo-colonialism.”

The NAM rejected the post war world-order and presented an alternative that proposed turning it on its head. The Algiers Summit laid the foundations that would, one year later, come to formulate the UN Declaration on the Establishment of a New International Economic Order, based “on equity, sovereign equality, interdependence, common interest and cooperation among all States.” “We face neither East nor West; We face forward,” said Kwame Nkrumah in summarising non-alignment’s struggle to advance the irreversible process of liberation.

Today, as the drums of war sound once again, peoples and nations are recapturing the spirit of Belgrade in 1961 as they struggle for a diplomacy based on cooperation and coexistence.


Spread the love
Continue Reading

EDITORIAL

Dismantling Northern Hegemony BRICS by BRICS

Published

on

By

Spread the love

Hegemony is the phenomenon whereby one group leads the whole by projecting its interests as the collective interest. For a long time, the international system has functioned under the leadership of the Global North, particularly the richest and most heavily-armed North American and European states.

This hegemony is so powerful that it is often not noticed. Students at Global North universities studying other parts of the world usually actually study US and EU strategic interests in those other parts of the world, which are passed off as common sense. The media with the biggest global reach frames its reporting of the world through the lens of Global North interests. But our world is changing and that hegemony is being challenged.

The BRICS, whose summit took place in South Africa last week, provides a telling case study. The term BRICs (lowercase S at the time) was first coined in a 2001 report authored by Jim O’Neill, then Wall Street investment bank Goldman Sachs’ head of economic research. In the paper for the firm, O’Neill pointed out that Brazil, Russia, India and China were the largest “emerging markets” (itself a term of capitalist hegemony, as countries are defined by their value to external investors) and set to grow faster than G7 countries. He argued that international economic policy-making, and in particular the G7, should be “adjusted to incorporate BRICs representatives.”

It is disputed whether O’Neill personally came up with the term BRICs or whether it was his research assistant, a young Indian woman called Roopa Purushothaman. She is now chief economist to India’s Tata group, whose estimated value is now around three times Goldman Sachs’ $106 billion market capitalisation. Another example of hegemony and its unravelling perhaps.

O’Neill’s predictions about economic growth proved accurate, but his prescription for greater inclusion in geo-economic management was not. Nevertheless, what started as a shorthand for Wall Street investment bankers to talk about rapidly growing economies began to take real form.

In 2006, the foreign ministers of the four countries met on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly in New York. In 2009, the presidents of the four states: Lula, Dimitry Medvedev, Manmohan Singh and Hu Jintao held the group’s first formal summit. The following year, South Africa was admitted to the group, helpfully adding an S to the acronym and representation from the African continent.

As a grouping, BRICS is still young but there are signs it is developing quickly, with this week’s summit marking a potential turning point. Mainly excluded from the US and EU-dominated system of global economic governance, BRICS is developing its own through the New Development Bank. Under the leadership of former Brazilian president Dilma Rousseff, who took over as chair of the Bank earlier this year, the NDB looks set to expand its role as a rival to the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund. The Bank has an authorized capital of $100 billion, which it lends to countries for development projects and infrastructure without the IMF’s austerity conditionalities. Interestingly, at the Summit this week, Rousseff announced her intention to issue around 30% of loans in local currencies, reducing the exchange rate risk for the recipient country.

Now twenty-three other Global South states have applied to join the club, including seven of the thirteen oil-producing OPEC states. As the summit closed, six were admitted, swelling the size and economic clout of the grouping.

Much of the coverage of the summit in Western media has focused on the geopolitics of the war in Ukraine. But its attendees were focused on the major issues of geo-economics: trade, the dollar, sanctions, development and infrastructure finance.

That’s because BRICS is not an anti-imperialist bloc, nor is it a socialist one. Indeed, according to both Xi Jinping of China and Lula of Brazil, it isn’t intended to be a bloc at all. Rather, it is a vehicle through which the global majority’s governments can express and coordinate their geo-economic interests in a world market whose governance systems all bear the impression of Global North hegemony.

The BRICS is not a moral force. But its development is part of a historical process that sees Northern hegemony wane and splinter. That process presents opportunities for progressive forces around the world to engage with critically.

That potential space for action could open not just for Southern progressive forces but those in the North, too. Global North hegemony has not been that of all the peoples of the Global North but that of the Global North’s ruling class. With that shaking, the majority in the Global North could join hands with the majority in the Global South to construct a new world on more equal terms for all.


Spread the love
Continue Reading

Trending

Copyright © 2023 Focus on Halal Economy | Powered by Africa Islamic Economic Foundation