Engineering an Islamic Future Speculations on Islamic Financial Alternatives

Engineering an Islamic Future Speculations on Islamic Financial Alternatives

Engineering an Islamic future Speculations on Islamic financial alternatives BILL MAURER Islamic banking was born as recently as the 1970s, prin- tract. Derivatives are considered dangerous and risky Bill Maurer is Associate cipally to service Muslims not allowed to pay or receive because the temporal ‘future’ that is being hedged Professor at the Department interest. Also known as ‘interest-free banking’, it has against in a futures contract is always contingent upon of Anthropology, University enjoyed a significant rise in stature over the last three unknown future events. How can a value be ascribed to of California. He specialises in the anthropology of law, decades. For example, from its humble beginnings, the such a contingency? The financial engineers who globalization, international Muslim Pilgrims Savings Corporation, set up in develop and price derivatives are sometimes called money and finance in the Malaysia in l963 to help people save for performing hajj ‘rocket scientists’, because they use complex mathemat- Caribbean, and gender and (pilgrimage to Mecca and Medina), eventually evolved in ical procedures derived from the particle physics of kinship. His email is [email protected]. 1983 into Malaysia’s first Islamic bank, the Bank Islam space-time – the science of contingency – to do their job. Malaysia Berhad. Today it is estimated that there are This risky rocket science is received differently in dif- more than 150 Islamic financial institutions operating in ferent financial cultures. How do people in these dif- over 70 countries, managing 102 Islamic equity funds, ferent financial cultures understand, transform and use and with well over US$10 billion under management. derivatives when they are working with their own finan- But Islamic banking is not limited to Islamic institu- cial practices which may not have been derived from tions alone. Even Western European banks such as ABN- Western economic principles? AMRO and Deutsche Bank have recently established This essay reports on the heated debate among Islamic dedicated Islamic banking units. Although in the United banking professionals about financial derivatives. States no licence to operate has yet been granted to an Because Islam contains injunctions about usury, risk, and Islamic bank, the new Islamic Dow Jones Index has been speculation (injunctions which are themselves subject to established within the last year. In London the Institute of considerable disagreement among Islamic banking pro- Islamic Banking and Insurance publishes a regular fessionals), derivatives are a focal point for discussions journal and also the Directory of Islamic banking. about the whole field of Islamic finance and have become Islamic funds are gaining a broader appeal as part of the a major point of difference with other financial cultures. emerging interest in what are broadly called ethical funds Are derivatives a form of gambling? Do they necessarily This paper was originally presented at the 1999 annual that do not invest in unethical practices and industries. entail speculation and therefore religiously unacceptable meeting of the American risk trading? Or are they prudent mechanisms for man- Anthropological Association. Contingent futures aging the risk that is a necessary component of business I would like to thank Nicholas The Western business press, critical political economists, or any other human enterprise, irrespective of local cul- Blomley, Tom Boellstorff, Saba Mahmood, Richard and Prime Minister Mahatir Mohammad of Malaysia tural or religious sensibilities? Although I will touch on Perry, Elizabeth A. Povinelli, may seem to have little in common. Yet, in commentaries the first two questions, I am most interested in the last, Annelise Riles and Katherine about the instability and risk inherent in global capi- since if the answer is ‘yes’, it raises questions about the Verdery for their comments on earlier versions of this talism, all three pin the blame for recent economic crises difference between Islamic banking and what Islamic paper. I would also like to and business scandals on the same villain: derivatives. A banking specialists call ‘conventional’ banking. thank the four anonymous derivative is a financial contract that can be bought and ‘Islamic derivatives’ are an important key to under- reviewers and sold, and thus constitutes an asset in its own right. standing salient differences between ‘Islamic’ and ‘con- ANTHROPOLOGY TODAY editorial staff for their However, its value is based on the value of other assets ventional’ banking from the point of view of Islamic criticisms and suggestions for which do not exist in the same moment of time as the banking professionals.1 Since banking is at the heart of improving the essay. derivative itself. The most familiar forms of derivatives commerce and industry, such understanding will con- Research has been supported are options and futures. A simple option contract might tribute to understanding many other aspects of the by the Program in Global Peace and Conflict Studies at state that the bearer is entitled to purchase grain at a spec- economies of Islamic countries, both in the past and in the University of California at ified date in the future at a specified price. The bearer can the future. Irvine, and National Science sell the option contract to another party before that date, I base my arguments in this essay on ongoing research Foundation grant SBR- and so each party is betting against the direction of grain conducted since 1998. This research has involved both 9818258, Law and Social Sciences Program, prices in order to make a profit from the sale of the con- online and face-to-face conversations with Islamic ‘Alternative globalizations: banking and finance (IBF) practitioners in the US, Community and conflict in Europe, South Asia and Southeast Asia. My interest is new cultures of finance’. 1. IBF specialists use the not the structure and performance of Islamic banking per phrase ‘conventional finance’ se (e.g. whether Islamic banking results in a higher rate to refer to non-Islamic of savings than conventional banking, or whether Islamic financial practices and forms. futures contracts are a prudent investment), which would Many participants question whether such disciplinary require a close study of particular institutions. My focus specialization in the field is is rather on the loose community of academics and pro- desirable – is there or is there fessionals seeking to create and sustain Islamic banking not a separate body of and finance as an academic discipline and as a global knowledge called ‘Islamic economics’, for instance – market force. What are the points of debate and dissent concerned about the among members of this community? What are the shared implications for background assumptions? How was this network of professionalization and credentialization that the expertise and knowledge constituted and what are the disciplinary boundary seems salient factors underlying its transformation? to suggest. I come to Islamic banking from a perhaps unexpected place: the offshore financial services sector in the An Islamic banking Caribbean (Maurer 1997; see Hampton 1996, Roberts conference in Kuala Lumpur, 1994, 1995). Until recently, Islamic banks could not Malaysia, 2000. incorporate very well in Europe and the United States. 8 ANTHROPOLOGY TODAY VOL 17 NO 1, FEBRUARY 2001 An international Islamic necessarily on the merits of their arguments, ‘but on the banking conference held in basis of politics’ (Ritter 1997:73). For Ritter, looking at Bahrain in 1999. lost economic alternatives throws the contingency of the present and of possible future trajectories more clearly into relief. It is in this light that I examine a contempo- rary, rather than a ‘lost’, economic alternative. Futures and options in Islamic banking and finance There is no one ‘Islam’ in Islamic banking and finance. Practitioners draw from various schools of Islamic jurisprudence as well as concepts from a wide cross-sec- tion of economic theory, from neoclassical to Marxist to Keynesian. There is, however, an emerging toolkit common to Islamic banking and finance professionals based in the USA, Europe, the Gulf States, and South and Southeast Asia, and a vocabulary of concepts and tech- Relying on profit and loss sharing contracts rather than nical terms used widely at conferences, in publications conventional deposit accounts, Islamic banks could not and during training courses. The Western business press reconcile their practices with onshore regulations which has even started to gain a grasp of these terms, as most of 2. I rely on Vogel and Hayes (1998) for parts of the mandated rates of return on deposits; in other words, with their articles on Islamic banking contain handy lists of 2 following discussion, because regulations requiring ‘interest’. However, they could commonly encountered financial contracts. Most of the it has become the standard text operate in the international tax havens in the Caribbean discussion, innovation and actual practice of IBF occurs to which non-IBF practitioners where Islamic banks were permitted to incorporate. They not in Saudi Arabia or the Gulf, but in the USA, the UK turn for handy summaries of 3 IBF positions and practices, found that Caribbean offshore centres provided, as one and Malaysia. This is due, in part, to legacies of colo- and because it is a readily Islamic finance professional put it, a ‘safe haven’ for nialism, patterns of wealth and privilege in the Middle available source, unlike various Islamically acceptable banking practices. I think of my East, and widely publicized banking scandals like the IBF working papers and research in the Caribbean as of a piece with my research Bank of Credit and Commerce International affair, which journal articles. It is also a widely read and accepted among Islamic finance professionals, since in each case linked Middle Eastern Islamic banking, Caribbean tax authority in Islamic banking my focus is on the often unexpected transformations of havens and criminal money-laundering activities in a circles, although some people I dominant financial forms into alternatives that may be neat and ill-fated bundle.

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