Issues in existing agricultural credit and scope of bay’al-Salam as an alternative

Joint Authors

Ahmad, Naim
Khan, Atiquzzafar
Mansur, Muhammad Tahir

Source

Journal of Islamic Business and Management

Issue

Vol. 9, Issue 1 (30 Jun. 2019), pp.98-111, 14 p.

Publisher

Riphah International University Riphah Centre of Islamic Business

Publication Date

2019-06-30

Country of Publication

Pakistan

No. of Pages

14

Main Subjects

Financial and Accounting Sciences

Abstract EN

.

This study focuses on issues in agricultural finance in Pakistan and suggests the use of bay‘ al-Salam, the forward contract as allowed in Islamic law of contracts.

Despite vital importance, the agriculture sector in Pakistan hasn’t been able to make the case to gain attention on the Government’s priority list.

A number of negatively impacting elements can be pointed out, but the standalone interest based system of agricultural credit can be termed as the most harmful for farmers, agriculture sector and the national economy.

Major problems include insufficient institutional credit, exorbitant rate of interest, non-availability of collateral and the cumbersome procedures.

This situation creates a credit gap which is filled by the non-institutional sources like middlemen, shopkeepers and money lenders who too exploit the poor farmers.

However, they still borrow from private sources as the access is easier.

The concerns are growing about the existing interest based credit system and voices are also raised for an alternative system that is easy to access as also compliant with the Shar¯ı‘ah principles.

Salam financing for the purchase of crops initiated by Sudanese banks couldn’t create desired impact fully.

Similarly, Salam financing offered by First Islamic Bank of Indonesia faced serious Shar¯ı‘ah compliance issues.

However, a private body namely Wasil Foundation’s bay‘ al-Salam initiative in Pakistan seems comparatively a successful story.

A relatively better response and wider acceptance by the stakeholders to Salam financing offered by Wasil indicates that banks (both conventional and Islamic) cannot apply Salam efficiently due to non-availability of required infrastructure.

Although Salam financing is highly instrumental mode of finance for agriculture, but could fail if managed through the Islamic banks in obtaining the desired outcome.

This study, based on the literature and expert opinion collected through a survey, proposes a separate body to handle Salam financing to agriculture in Pakistan.

American Psychological Association (APA)

Ahmad, Naim& Khan, Atiquzzafar& Mansur, Muhammad Tahir. 2019. Issues in existing agricultural credit and scope of bay’al-Salam as an alternative. Journal of Islamic Business and Management،Vol. 9, no. 1, pp.98-111.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-920540

Modern Language Association (MLA)

Ahmad, Naim…[et al.]. Issues in existing agricultural credit and scope of bay’al-Salam as an alternative. Journal of Islamic Business and Management Vol. 9, no. 1 (2019), pp.98-111.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-920540

American Medical Association (AMA)

Ahmad, Naim& Khan, Atiquzzafar& Mansur, Muhammad Tahir. Issues in existing agricultural credit and scope of bay’al-Salam as an alternative. Journal of Islamic Business and Management. 2019. Vol. 9, no. 1, pp.98-111.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-920540

Data Type

Journal Articles

Language

English

Notes

Includes bibliographical references : p. 107-111

Record ID

BIM-920540