ID :
30961
Tue, 11/18/2008 - 19:58
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RE-POSITION ISLAMIC BANKING & FINANCE, SAYS NAJIB

KUALA LUMPUR, Nov 18 (Bernama) -- The Deputy Prime Minister, Najib Razak Tuesday outlined general work plans to position and re-position Islamic banking and the finance industry to enable it to fully exploit the potential market of one billion Muslims worldwide.

Currently, although the Islamic finance industry is the fastest growing
segment in international financial services, it is still too small compared with
the size of the potential market, he said.

"A key impediment to the growth of Islamic finance is the lack of awareness
among the public on Islamic alternative modes of banking,insurance and
investments.

"The industry must continously engage and educate the general public in
order to address the problem," he added.

Islamic finance, he said also needs further research and study with
discourses carried out at all levels and should involve regulators,
practitioners as well as academicians.

"Investment in human capital must further be improved. The lack of
knowledge in Islamic finance is strongly related to the shortage of qualified
experts.

"Hence, it has affected the innovation of new products and services in the
country," he said in his keynote address at the Kuala Lumpur Islamic Finance
Forum 2008.

"There is also an urgent need to create greater awareness on Islamic
finance among market participants through research, education and training," he
highlighted.

He said despite the divergence of Shariah rulings, its should not be an
impediment, as long as they are backed by sound arguments and recognised legal
methodologies.

"Any particular area of divergence that is of serious concern should be
revisited and reviewed in order to come up with better and more acceptable
solutions," said Najib, who is also the Finance Minister.

He also said that the legal and regulatory framework should be resilient
and
facilitative.

"Dispute resolution mechanisms should also be more accommodative to the
application of Islamic legal rules and methods in order to avoid embarrassment
to Islamic banking cases as a result of incoherent and anomalous legal
judgements," he stated.

Najib said other related regulations and supervision should also be
equally and adequately addressed so as to bring the Islamic banks and financial
institutions at par with international standards.

To meet these challenges, he said new supervisory and regulatory procedures
must be developed and modifications made to the existing structures or
procedures.

"However, since the banking sector is highly regulated, any modification
must be made with extreme care as the failure of an Islamic bank could undermine
depositor and investor confidence, leading to a crisis in the whole
financial system, just like what we see happening currently in the conventional
market," he warned.

On the outlook, he said the Islamic banking industry is forecast to grow at
a rate of at least 20 percent between now and 2012, with more than US$600
billion held or managed by Islamic institutions and the figure is expected
to grow to US$1 trillion over the next couple of years.

According to Najib, growth has also been seen in the other major components
of the Islamic financial system such as Islamic mutual funds estimated to be
about US$300 billion, while global takaful or Shariah compliant insurance
contributions are estimated to be about US$5 billion and expected to triple by
the end of the decade.

-- BERNAMA

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