Page 3 - Islamic Finance Practices
P. 3
Convergence in Practice
But reality bites as signs of converging into
mainstream banking practices are painfully visible
that brought questions of substance over form.
When tawaruq and Murabaha instruments began
behaving like interest-bearing loans, convergence
seemed imminent. Converging means possible
exposures to the danger of fragility as well as the
injustices that riba creates in a lender-borrower
relationship. One is fragile if he avoids disorder
and disruption for fear of the mess they might
make of his life: he thinks he is keeping safe, but
really he is making himself vulnerable to the shock
that will tear everything apart. Fragility in Islamic
banking will mean failure to stay resilient to shocks
arising from its debt dependent system that it
should be free from in the first place.
According to IMF (2017), hybrid financial products
emerging in Islamic banking have
replicated aspects of conventional finance, raising
financial stability concerns. It supports earlier
studies indicating that both the Islamic and
conventional banking systems are vulnerable to
macroeconomic and financial shocks. This is
despite the popular belief that the Islamic financial
system can weather financial shocks relatively well
due to its interest‐free nature. It somewhat
contradicts suggestions that the interest‐free
banking system is able to insulate the monetary