KUALA LUMPUR, May 16 (Bernama) -- Islamic Finance industry, which grows
about 15 per cent a year, is projected to manage four per cent of the
world economy soon.
Source from (Bernama): http://www.bernama.com/bernama/v7/bu/newsbusiness.php?id=950205
Published: May 17, 2013
Governor of Qatar Central Bank and Chairman of Islamic Financial
Services Board (IFSB), Sheikh Abdulla Saoud Al-Thani said over the past
10 years, Islamic Finance witnessed continued growth despite facing
several challenges in the wake of the ongoing global financial crisis.
"Islamic financial institutions are now operating in well over 75
countries, having a total financial asset size of over a trillion
dollars," he said when opening 10th IFSB Summit 2013 here today.
"With the implementation of the Basel III gradually approaching, the
IFSB is working hard to introduce standards consistent with Basel III
such as IFSB exposure Draft 15 to assist Islamic financial institutions.
"The challenge is that even with all the reform being created and
developed, our utmost concern lies with the implementation of these
standards in different jurisdictions that are increasingly getting
involved in cross-border transactions," he said.
Sheikh Abdulla said there was a need to reduce the cost of finance.
"According to some reports, the cost of issuing sukuk can be as much as
60 per ent higher than conventional bonds, which can have a negative
impact on the growth of the sukuk market.
"This brings back to the issue of standardisation and the continual debate of how much standardisation is needed.," he said.
Meanwhile, IFSB secretary-general Jaseem Ahmed said the IFSB surveys
and research results indicated that national supervisory practices,
supported by IFSB standards, have made significant progress in
reflecting the risk characteristics of Islamic Finance.
"But many challenges remain, including the progressive completion of a
supervisory system and supporting financial infrastructure that fully
reflects the cross-sectoral aspects of Islamic Finance.
"This is in addition to the continuing need for a systemic liquidity
management infrastructure that will help strengthen risk management
capabilities at the level of financial institutions and macroeconomic
level," he added.
Islamic Development Bank Group president Dr Ahmad Mohamed Ali Al-Madani
said based on lessons learnt from the financial crisis, there were
calls for a new architecture to help minimise the frequency and severity
of such crises in future.
"The Islamic financial services industry is capable of providing the broad parameters of such an architecture," he said.
The merit of the Islamic financial services industry should not,
however, be judged merely in the light of whether it was capable of
providing a worthwhile contribution towards the goal of minimising the
frequency and severity of financial crisis," he said in his opening
remarks at the summit.
The system should also be judged on the basis of its ability to help
developing countries achieve a reasonably high rate of inclusive
economic growth that was not only immune to excessive monetary expansion
and contraction but also provide a tangible way out of crucial problems
like poverty and unemployment.
-- BERNAMA
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