Islamic Finance
Muslim Knowledge Guide Al-Azhar: Bank Interest, Riba Fatwa and Islamic Finance Debate
Articles • yusuf908 posted the article • 0 comments • 8 views • 3 hours ago
Summary: This Muslim knowledge guide translates and explains Mahmoud A. El-Gamal's discussion of an Al-Azhar fatwa on bank interest, fixed investment profits, riba, mudaraba, jurist disagreement, historical context, and whether bank returns can be treated as lawful investment income.
I posted a screenshot of a book written by Imam Chen Yufeng on my social media. At the end of the book, Imam Chen shares a personal experience regarding interest. He mentions that issue 168 of the Al-Azhar Journal once ruled bank interest as lawful. A friend later found the original source of this fatwa, along with a commentary article explaining the background of the ruling, titled
“The recent Azhar fatwā:Its logic, and historical background”
I will not post the link here, so please search for it yourself. The original text is in English and includes the Arabic version. I have translated the article below for your reference, as it complements the post I shared earlier.
You cannot buy Imam Chen's book, and there is no digital version, so please stop asking me how to purchase it.
“The recent Azhar fatwā:Its logic, and historical background”
Author: Mahmoud A. El-Gamal
Rice University, USA
Author's Preface:
I am not a jurist, but an academic researcher. Therefore, I am not qualified to endorse or reject this fatwa. The purpose of this article is only to explain and summarize the ruling. To explain what this fatwa says? It says nothing. How scholars view it and the logic behind it.
What does this religious ruling (fatwa) say?
It is perfectly fine to deposit your money in a bank and appoint the bank as your agent for investments in exchange for an agreed-upon profit. Neither the Quran nor the Hadith forbids this kind of deal where profit or payment is set in advance, as long as both sides agree to it.
There is no doubt that both sides agreeing to a set profit beforehand is allowed under Islamic law. It also makes logical sense so that each party knows exactly what their share will be.
As everyone knows, a bank only sets these profits or returns for clients after carefully studying global and local markets, economic conditions, the specifics of each deal, the type of investment, and the average expected profit.
This set profit rate can go up or down over time. For example, an investment project might start with a 4% return, grow to over 15%, and then recently drop back to near 10%.
The people who set these rates and manage their changes must follow government rules. Setting a fixed number in advance—especially in these times when honesty is rare—benefits both the investors and the bank.
Investors benefit from stable profit rates, which helps them plan their lives. Bank managers benefit from performance incentives, which push them to work harder to maximize profits and keep the bank profitable even after paying the investors their set returns. What if the bank loses money during that time? How can it set a profit rate in advance? The answer is that a bank might lose money on one investment but make a profit on many others, which covers the loss.
In short: it is allowed for someone to invest money through an institution into a bank or other financial firm with a pre-set profit. There is nothing suspicious about it. This type of transaction is judged by its benefits and is not considered associating partners with Allah (shirk). Therefore, investing money in a bank with a pre-agreed profit or return is allowed and causes no harm. Allah knows best.
What does this religious ruling (fatwa) not say?
Please note that this fatwa does not explicitly state that all bank interest is halal.
Dr. Tantawi has clearly stated elsewhere that interest on bank deposits is riba, and interest on bank loans is also riba. (See Mucamalat al-Bunuk..., 2001, pp. 139-142)
There are three points of contention here.
First, are funds held for business operations considered deposits?
Second, are funds borrowed for business operations considered loans?
Third, is it forbidden to pre-determine the profit for one party in an investment activity?
There is little disagreement regarding deposits.
There is substantial disagreement regarding loans:
Abdullah Al-Najjar explains Dr. Tantawi's position as follows:
Funds given to a bank cannot be seen as a form of loan because the bank has no need, and only those in need apply for loans. Anas ibn Malik reported that the Prophet said: 'On the night of the Ascension, I saw written on the gate of Paradise: Charity is rewarded tenfold, and a loan is rewarded eighteenfold.' I said: 'O Jibril!' Why is borrowing more expensive than giving charity? The angel Jibril said: 'Because a beggar asks when they still have something, but a borrower only asks when they are in urgent need.' — Sunan Ibn Majah
Therefore, if a transaction is not a loan, bank customers must be seen as investors who intend to seek profit from the bank (the bank announces the return rate they pay, and customers choose the bank they prefer).
Jurists believe that once deposit funds are used, they are promised, and because holding a guarantee (like a loan) is more reliable than holding a trust (like a deposit), the deposit contract becomes a loan, and any increase is forbidden interest (riba).
the 'preset profit' in profit-sharing (mudaraba) is the core of what this Islamic law forbids.
Al-Qaradawi and many others believe that the hadith regarding sharecropping (muzara'ah) provides the basis for the prohibition. The Sharia committee mentioned the claim of 'consensus' put forward by Ibn Qudamah in Al-Mughni and confirmed that this 'consensus' is as binding as the classical texts.
The 14th session of the Fiqh Academy, January 2003, Decision #133 (7/14), pages 20-24.
Religious law and secular law describe the relationship between a depositor and a bank as a loan relationship, not an agency relationship. In contrast, an investment agency is where an agent invests funds on behalf of a principal in exchange for a fixed wage or a share of the profits. In this regard, religious scholars have a consensus that the principal owns the investment funds and therefore has the right to receive investment gains and is responsible for losses, while the agent has the right to receive a fixed wage under the conditions set by the agency. Therefore, a traditional bank is not an investment agent for the depositor. The bank receives funds from the depositor and uses them, thereby guaranteeing said funds and making them a loan. In this regard, the loan must be repaid at face value without any increase.
For centuries, jurists from all schools have agreed that you cannot pre-set investment profits in any partnership, whether as a fixed amount or a percentage of the capital. This ruling is based on the idea that pre-setting profits guarantees the principal, which goes against the nature of a partnership where you must share both profits and losses. This consensus is well-established and has no reported disagreements. In this regard, Ibn Qudamah wrote in Al-Mughni (Volume 3, page 34): All scholars agree that if one or both parties set a known amount of profit, the partnership (qirad or mudaraba) becomes invalid. The consensus of religious scholars is itself a legal proof.
Pre-specifying profits
Dr. Tantawi and his supporters rejected the loan issue and held a long discussion on the problem of pre-set profits. Dr. Tantawi cited Abdul-Wahhab Khallaf and Dr. Ali Al-Khafif to support his view that it is inappropriate to limit investment institutions to traditional mudaraba, which has profit sharing but no specific profit amount.
The main argument for fixed profits
Tantawi (2001, page 131) quoted Khallaf (pages 94-104), Al-Khafif (pages 165-204), and others (pages 204-211) word for word, saying: In this era of corruption, dishonesty, and greed, not fixing profits as a percentage of capital would leave the principal at the mercy of the agents managing the investment funds, whether they are banks or other institutions.
Therefore, he and earlier scholars turned to the well-known issue of moral hazard, which is unrelated to profit distribution.
Second, once the loan or deposit argument is rejected, the remaining issue is how to handle the consensus theory in Al-Mughni and the hadith it is based on.
Is the claim of consensus accepted? Is it binding?
Does this decision have a basis in the Quran and Sunnah, or can it be overturned?
If a partnership is considered flawed because the profit margin is predetermined, does this make it forbidden interest (riba), or is it a permitted lease (ijara), such as whether a mutually agreed upon (though uncertain) wage payment is legal?
Hadith on tenant farming.
Hanzalah ibn Qays narrated: I asked Rafi ibn Khadij about renting land for gold and silver. Rafi replied: 'There is no harm in this. In the time of the Prophet, people rented land for the crops and straw that grew along the waterways. Sometimes there was a harvest, and sometimes there was none. People rented land this way, so the Prophet forbade it. As for rent that is fixed and guaranteed, there is no harm.'
— Sunan Ibn Majah
This hadith shows that it is forbidden to pre-arrange any geography, time, or quantity for land rented to tenant farmers. Jurists concluded that because of uncertainty, predetermined compensation for either party is not allowed. This ruling on tenant farming applies to other partnerships, including profit-sharing partnerships (mudaraba). Therefore, Ibn Qudamah believed that jurists reached a consensus that it is not allowed to pre-specify profits in a mudaraba.
Dr. Abdullah Al-Najjar wrote a detailed discussion on this hadith and the conclusions drawn from it. He argued that the prohibition does not stem from the condition of pre-specifying profit itself, but from the uncertainty (gharar) that could lead to disputes (citing the narrative and analysis in Al-Shawkani's Nayl Al-Awtar). On the other hand, he argued that this type of partnership is essentially an employment contract with an unknown reward, and is therefore full of uncertainty. However, a consensus ruling actually permits this contract (including profit sharing) despite the uncertainty (as Ibn Qudamah stated). Therefore, this type of partnership belongs to a category of contracts where uncertainty (including that caused by pre-specifying profit) is ignored, as long as it does not lead to legal disputes.
Dr. Al-Najjar presented many other arguments based on the analysis of Al-Shawkani and Ibn Qudamah. He said: This might be Rafi's own non-binding conclusion; it might be limited to specific types of tenant farming; Zayd ibn Thabit disagreed with this hadith, claiming it related to a specific incident where one person killed another (recorded by Abu Dawud); the hadith narrated by Ibn Umar suggests that renting land is permitted (recorded by Bukhari), which challenges the hadith; other companions of the Prophet, including Ibn Abbas and others, disagreed with Rafi's view. Ibn Qudamah said that some of Rafi's narrations differ from the consensus of the companions and must therefore be discarded.
At the Al-Azhar conference, Dr. Muhammad Rif'at Uthman presented a counter-argument. According to Al-Nawawi, the hadith does not forbid renting land for a fixed rent (which was the focus of previous arguments), but it does forbid pre-specifying profits.
Most jurists believe that a profit-sharing partnership (mudāraba) that is known to be flawed or invalid from the start is not allowed. Dr. Tantāwī focuses on the consensus view that when a mudāraba is considered flawed, such as when an investor's profit is specified in advance, the contract becomes an employment contract ('ijara). Under this, the entrepreneur or worker is entitled to a market wage, as noted by ibn al-Humām in Fath Al-Qadīr and Al-Shaficī in 'um. He summarizes this (2001, p. 133):
Therefore, we say that a bank investing for a pre-specified profit becomes an employee of the investor. The investor accepts the amount the bank gives them as their profit, and any excess profit, whatever it may be, is treated as the bank's wage. Thus, this type of transaction is free of interest (Ribā). In short, we cannot find any canonical text or convincing analogy that forbids specifying profit in advance as long as both parties agree.
Quotes from early jurists
Dr. Tantāwī (2001, p. 95) quotes Dr. Khallāf, who in turn quotes Muhammad Abduh's 1906 article in Manār (#9, p. 332): When a person gives their money to another for investment and receives a known profit, this does not constitute clearly forbidden Ribā, regardless of the pre-specified profit rate. This is because legal rules that disagree on forbidding pre-specified profit do not constitute the clear type of Ribā that ruins families. This type of transaction is beneficial to both the investor and the entrepreneur. In contrast, Ribā for the borrower is only due to need and is not their fault, while for the lender, Ribā leads to greed and a hardened heart. These two types of transactions cannot have the same legal status (hukm).
Dr. Khallāf, in Liwā' 'Islām (1951, #4 (11)), continues (quoted in the same, pp. 95-6): There is no evidence that profit cannot be specified in advance. Just as profit can be shared between two parties, the profit for one party can also be specified in advance. Such a condition might not align with the views of jurists, but it does not contradict any canonical text in the Quran or Sunnah.
Core argument
Dr. Khallaf summarizes the basis for the current Al-Azhar ruling as follows: The only objection to this type of transaction is the validity of mudāraba, which requires that profit must be set as a percentage share rather than a specific capital amount or percentage. My response to this objection is as follows: First, there is no evidence for this condition in the Quran or the Sunnah. We live in a very dishonest time now, and if we do not set a fixed profit for the investor, his partner will swallow up his wealth.
Second, if a mudāraba is considered flawed because it violates one of its conditions, the entrepreneur becomes an employee, and what he takes is considered a wage. There is no difference in calling it mudāraba or 'ijāra: it is a valid transaction that benefits the investor who cannot invest funds directly and benefits the entrepreneur who receives the funds. Therefore, this is a transaction that benefits both parties without harming either side or anyone else, and banning such a beneficial transaction will harm the Ummah.
Key points
Recent academic journals from Al-Azhar do allow certain types of bank interest to be used as investment profit.
This fatwa is at least a century old.
Most jurists oppose this fatwa.
A minority have questioned the authenticity, authority, and applicability of the hadith regarding sharecroppers.
A minority have questioned the logic of prohibiting the pre-specification of profit.
Can we still claim that a consensus exists?
If this issue is controversial, should we proceed with caution? Should we follow the view of the majority? view all
Summary: This Muslim knowledge guide translates and explains Mahmoud A. El-Gamal's discussion of an Al-Azhar fatwa on bank interest, fixed investment profits, riba, mudaraba, jurist disagreement, historical context, and whether bank returns can be treated as lawful investment income.
I posted a screenshot of a book written by Imam Chen Yufeng on my social media. At the end of the book, Imam Chen shares a personal experience regarding interest. He mentions that issue 168 of the Al-Azhar Journal once ruled bank interest as lawful. A friend later found the original source of this fatwa, along with a commentary article explaining the background of the ruling, titled
“The recent Azhar fatwā:Its logic, and historical background”
I will not post the link here, so please search for it yourself. The original text is in English and includes the Arabic version. I have translated the article below for your reference, as it complements the post I shared earlier.
You cannot buy Imam Chen's book, and there is no digital version, so please stop asking me how to purchase it.



“The recent Azhar fatwā:Its logic, and historical background”
Author: Mahmoud A. El-Gamal
Rice University, USA
Author's Preface:
I am not a jurist, but an academic researcher. Therefore, I am not qualified to endorse or reject this fatwa. The purpose of this article is only to explain and summarize the ruling. To explain what this fatwa says? It says nothing. How scholars view it and the logic behind it.
What does this religious ruling (fatwa) say?
It is perfectly fine to deposit your money in a bank and appoint the bank as your agent for investments in exchange for an agreed-upon profit. Neither the Quran nor the Hadith forbids this kind of deal where profit or payment is set in advance, as long as both sides agree to it.
There is no doubt that both sides agreeing to a set profit beforehand is allowed under Islamic law. It also makes logical sense so that each party knows exactly what their share will be.
As everyone knows, a bank only sets these profits or returns for clients after carefully studying global and local markets, economic conditions, the specifics of each deal, the type of investment, and the average expected profit.
This set profit rate can go up or down over time. For example, an investment project might start with a 4% return, grow to over 15%, and then recently drop back to near 10%.
The people who set these rates and manage their changes must follow government rules. Setting a fixed number in advance—especially in these times when honesty is rare—benefits both the investors and the bank.
Investors benefit from stable profit rates, which helps them plan their lives. Bank managers benefit from performance incentives, which push them to work harder to maximize profits and keep the bank profitable even after paying the investors their set returns. What if the bank loses money during that time? How can it set a profit rate in advance? The answer is that a bank might lose money on one investment but make a profit on many others, which covers the loss.
In short: it is allowed for someone to invest money through an institution into a bank or other financial firm with a pre-set profit. There is nothing suspicious about it. This type of transaction is judged by its benefits and is not considered associating partners with Allah (shirk). Therefore, investing money in a bank with a pre-agreed profit or return is allowed and causes no harm. Allah knows best.
What does this religious ruling (fatwa) not say?
Please note that this fatwa does not explicitly state that all bank interest is halal.
Dr. Tantawi has clearly stated elsewhere that interest on bank deposits is riba, and interest on bank loans is also riba. (See Mucamalat al-Bunuk..., 2001, pp. 139-142)
There are three points of contention here.
First, are funds held for business operations considered deposits?
Second, are funds borrowed for business operations considered loans?
Third, is it forbidden to pre-determine the profit for one party in an investment activity?
There is little disagreement regarding deposits.
There is substantial disagreement regarding loans:
Abdullah Al-Najjar explains Dr. Tantawi's position as follows:
Funds given to a bank cannot be seen as a form of loan because the bank has no need, and only those in need apply for loans. Anas ibn Malik reported that the Prophet said: 'On the night of the Ascension, I saw written on the gate of Paradise: Charity is rewarded tenfold, and a loan is rewarded eighteenfold.' I said: 'O Jibril!' Why is borrowing more expensive than giving charity? The angel Jibril said: 'Because a beggar asks when they still have something, but a borrower only asks when they are in urgent need.' — Sunan Ibn Majah
Therefore, if a transaction is not a loan, bank customers must be seen as investors who intend to seek profit from the bank (the bank announces the return rate they pay, and customers choose the bank they prefer).
Jurists believe that once deposit funds are used, they are promised, and because holding a guarantee (like a loan) is more reliable than holding a trust (like a deposit), the deposit contract becomes a loan, and any increase is forbidden interest (riba).
the 'preset profit' in profit-sharing (mudaraba) is the core of what this Islamic law forbids.
Al-Qaradawi and many others believe that the hadith regarding sharecropping (muzara'ah) provides the basis for the prohibition. The Sharia committee mentioned the claim of 'consensus' put forward by Ibn Qudamah in Al-Mughni and confirmed that this 'consensus' is as binding as the classical texts.
The 14th session of the Fiqh Academy, January 2003, Decision #133 (7/14), pages 20-24.
Religious law and secular law describe the relationship between a depositor and a bank as a loan relationship, not an agency relationship. In contrast, an investment agency is where an agent invests funds on behalf of a principal in exchange for a fixed wage or a share of the profits. In this regard, religious scholars have a consensus that the principal owns the investment funds and therefore has the right to receive investment gains and is responsible for losses, while the agent has the right to receive a fixed wage under the conditions set by the agency. Therefore, a traditional bank is not an investment agent for the depositor. The bank receives funds from the depositor and uses them, thereby guaranteeing said funds and making them a loan. In this regard, the loan must be repaid at face value without any increase.
For centuries, jurists from all schools have agreed that you cannot pre-set investment profits in any partnership, whether as a fixed amount or a percentage of the capital. This ruling is based on the idea that pre-setting profits guarantees the principal, which goes against the nature of a partnership where you must share both profits and losses. This consensus is well-established and has no reported disagreements. In this regard, Ibn Qudamah wrote in Al-Mughni (Volume 3, page 34): All scholars agree that if one or both parties set a known amount of profit, the partnership (qirad or mudaraba) becomes invalid. The consensus of religious scholars is itself a legal proof.
Pre-specifying profits
Dr. Tantawi and his supporters rejected the loan issue and held a long discussion on the problem of pre-set profits. Dr. Tantawi cited Abdul-Wahhab Khallaf and Dr. Ali Al-Khafif to support his view that it is inappropriate to limit investment institutions to traditional mudaraba, which has profit sharing but no specific profit amount.
The main argument for fixed profits
Tantawi (2001, page 131) quoted Khallaf (pages 94-104), Al-Khafif (pages 165-204), and others (pages 204-211) word for word, saying: In this era of corruption, dishonesty, and greed, not fixing profits as a percentage of capital would leave the principal at the mercy of the agents managing the investment funds, whether they are banks or other institutions.
Therefore, he and earlier scholars turned to the well-known issue of moral hazard, which is unrelated to profit distribution.
Second, once the loan or deposit argument is rejected, the remaining issue is how to handle the consensus theory in Al-Mughni and the hadith it is based on.
Is the claim of consensus accepted? Is it binding?
Does this decision have a basis in the Quran and Sunnah, or can it be overturned?
If a partnership is considered flawed because the profit margin is predetermined, does this make it forbidden interest (riba), or is it a permitted lease (ijara), such as whether a mutually agreed upon (though uncertain) wage payment is legal?
Hadith on tenant farming.
Hanzalah ibn Qays narrated: I asked Rafi ibn Khadij about renting land for gold and silver. Rafi replied: 'There is no harm in this. In the time of the Prophet, people rented land for the crops and straw that grew along the waterways. Sometimes there was a harvest, and sometimes there was none. People rented land this way, so the Prophet forbade it. As for rent that is fixed and guaranteed, there is no harm.'
— Sunan Ibn Majah
This hadith shows that it is forbidden to pre-arrange any geography, time, or quantity for land rented to tenant farmers. Jurists concluded that because of uncertainty, predetermined compensation for either party is not allowed. This ruling on tenant farming applies to other partnerships, including profit-sharing partnerships (mudaraba). Therefore, Ibn Qudamah believed that jurists reached a consensus that it is not allowed to pre-specify profits in a mudaraba.
Dr. Abdullah Al-Najjar wrote a detailed discussion on this hadith and the conclusions drawn from it. He argued that the prohibition does not stem from the condition of pre-specifying profit itself, but from the uncertainty (gharar) that could lead to disputes (citing the narrative and analysis in Al-Shawkani's Nayl Al-Awtar). On the other hand, he argued that this type of partnership is essentially an employment contract with an unknown reward, and is therefore full of uncertainty. However, a consensus ruling actually permits this contract (including profit sharing) despite the uncertainty (as Ibn Qudamah stated). Therefore, this type of partnership belongs to a category of contracts where uncertainty (including that caused by pre-specifying profit) is ignored, as long as it does not lead to legal disputes.
Dr. Al-Najjar presented many other arguments based on the analysis of Al-Shawkani and Ibn Qudamah. He said: This might be Rafi's own non-binding conclusion; it might be limited to specific types of tenant farming; Zayd ibn Thabit disagreed with this hadith, claiming it related to a specific incident where one person killed another (recorded by Abu Dawud); the hadith narrated by Ibn Umar suggests that renting land is permitted (recorded by Bukhari), which challenges the hadith; other companions of the Prophet, including Ibn Abbas and others, disagreed with Rafi's view. Ibn Qudamah said that some of Rafi's narrations differ from the consensus of the companions and must therefore be discarded.
At the Al-Azhar conference, Dr. Muhammad Rif'at Uthman presented a counter-argument. According to Al-Nawawi, the hadith does not forbid renting land for a fixed rent (which was the focus of previous arguments), but it does forbid pre-specifying profits.
Most jurists believe that a profit-sharing partnership (mudāraba) that is known to be flawed or invalid from the start is not allowed. Dr. Tantāwī focuses on the consensus view that when a mudāraba is considered flawed, such as when an investor's profit is specified in advance, the contract becomes an employment contract ('ijara). Under this, the entrepreneur or worker is entitled to a market wage, as noted by ibn al-Humām in Fath Al-Qadīr and Al-Shaficī in 'um. He summarizes this (2001, p. 133):
Therefore, we say that a bank investing for a pre-specified profit becomes an employee of the investor. The investor accepts the amount the bank gives them as their profit, and any excess profit, whatever it may be, is treated as the bank's wage. Thus, this type of transaction is free of interest (Ribā). In short, we cannot find any canonical text or convincing analogy that forbids specifying profit in advance as long as both parties agree.
Quotes from early jurists
Dr. Tantāwī (2001, p. 95) quotes Dr. Khallāf, who in turn quotes Muhammad Abduh's 1906 article in Manār (#9, p. 332): When a person gives their money to another for investment and receives a known profit, this does not constitute clearly forbidden Ribā, regardless of the pre-specified profit rate. This is because legal rules that disagree on forbidding pre-specified profit do not constitute the clear type of Ribā that ruins families. This type of transaction is beneficial to both the investor and the entrepreneur. In contrast, Ribā for the borrower is only due to need and is not their fault, while for the lender, Ribā leads to greed and a hardened heart. These two types of transactions cannot have the same legal status (hukm).
Dr. Khallāf, in Liwā' 'Islām (1951, #4 (11)), continues (quoted in the same, pp. 95-6): There is no evidence that profit cannot be specified in advance. Just as profit can be shared between two parties, the profit for one party can also be specified in advance. Such a condition might not align with the views of jurists, but it does not contradict any canonical text in the Quran or Sunnah.
Core argument
Dr. Khallaf summarizes the basis for the current Al-Azhar ruling as follows: The only objection to this type of transaction is the validity of mudāraba, which requires that profit must be set as a percentage share rather than a specific capital amount or percentage. My response to this objection is as follows: First, there is no evidence for this condition in the Quran or the Sunnah. We live in a very dishonest time now, and if we do not set a fixed profit for the investor, his partner will swallow up his wealth.
Second, if a mudāraba is considered flawed because it violates one of its conditions, the entrepreneur becomes an employee, and what he takes is considered a wage. There is no difference in calling it mudāraba or 'ijāra: it is a valid transaction that benefits the investor who cannot invest funds directly and benefits the entrepreneur who receives the funds. Therefore, this is a transaction that benefits both parties without harming either side or anyone else, and banning such a beneficial transaction will harm the Ummah.
Key points
Recent academic journals from Al-Azhar do allow certain types of bank interest to be used as investment profit.
This fatwa is at least a century old.
Most jurists oppose this fatwa.
A minority have questioned the authenticity, authority, and applicability of the hadith regarding sharecroppers.
A minority have questioned the logic of prohibiting the pre-specification of profit.
Can we still claim that a consensus exists?
If this issue is controversial, should we proceed with caution? Should we follow the view of the majority?
Muslim Knowledge Guide China: Islamic Finance Critique, Riba Debate and Banking Ethics
Articles • yusuf908 posted the article • 0 comments • 10 views • 4 hours ago
Summary: This Muslim knowledge guide presents a critical look at Islamic finance, including Sharia compliance, profit-and-loss sharing, murabaha, interest benchmarks, social justice concerns, scholar critiques, banking practice, and the gap between ideal Islamic finance and real-world banking.
This article is a collection and compilation of critiques on Islamic finance. The content mainly comes from the English Wikipedia entry 'Challenges in Islamic finance' and various scholars' blogs. The skepticism from these foreign scholars shows that so-called 'Islamic finance' is not as competitive as we imagine. It has many problems and perhaps should not even be promoted under the name 'Islamic'.
The challenge facing Islamic finance is the difficulty of providing modern financial services without violating Sharia law. The development of the Islamic banking and finance industry centers on avoiding interest, which is seen as an unjust and exploitative gain in trade or business.
Most Islamic banking customers come from the Gulf and developed countries in the Muslim world. Challenges include the fact that interest rate benchmarks have been used to set Islamic 'profit' rates, so the 'net returns are not substantially different from interest-based transactions'. In essence, Islamic banking is 'nothing more than a matter of changing contracts...'.
Religiously, Islamic finance prefers a profit and loss sharing (PLS) model. However, this causes problems, including the need to wait for investment projects to generate earnings before profits can be distributed, which increases risk and complexity for financial service providers.
The Islamic finance industry has been praised for developing a 'theory' into an industry worth about 2 trillion US dollars. It has attracted banking users who could not use traditional banking services for religious reasons, drawn non-Muslim bankers into the field, and (according to other supporters) introduced a more stable and lower-risk form of financing.
However, the industry is also criticized for ignoring its 'basic philosophy' and moving in the wrong direction for decades, leading both outsiders and ordinary Muslims to question it. First, it abandoned the original financing method advocated by its promoters—risk-sharing financing—in favor of fixed-markup purchase financing (especially murabaha). It then distorted the rules of fixed-markup murabaha to effectively provide traditional cash interest loans like conventional interest rates, but disguised them with 'word games' while bearing 'higher costs and greater risks'.
Other issues and complaints raised include that the industry has made no effort to help small vendors and the poor. How to deal with the problem of inflation; Delayed payments; A lack of currency and interest rate hedging; Or a lack of short-term cash deposit accounts that follow Sharia law; Most Islamic banking businesses are owned by non-Muslims;
In a series of interviews with Pakistani banking professionals (traditional and Islamic bankers, Sharia banking advisors, business people using finance, and management consultants) in 2008 and 2010, economist Faisal Khan noted that many Islamic bankers expressed 'skepticism' about the differences, or lack thereof, between traditional and Islamic banking products. He also noted a lack of external Sharia compliance audit requirements for Islamic banks in Pakistan, and that Sharia boards lacked awareness of their banks failing to follow Sharia-compliant practices or were unable to stop them. However, this did not stop devout people from using the banks (one person explained that if his Islamic bank was not truly following Sharia, 'the punishment is on their heads, not mine!'); I have done what I can do.
An estimate of customer preferences in the Pakistani banking industry (provided by a Pakistani banker) is that about 10% of customers are 'strictly traditional banking customers,' 20% are strictly Sharia-compliant banking customers, and 70% prefer Sharia-compliant banking but will use traditional banking if the 'price difference is significant.' A survey of Islamic and traditional banking customers found that Islamic banking customers were more observant (attending Hajj, performing namaz, keeping a beard, etc.), but they also had higher savings account balances than traditional banking customers, were older, better educated, traveled abroad more, and tended to open a second account at a traditional bank. Another study using 'official data' reported to the State Bank of Pakistan found that for lenders who received both Islamic (murabaha) financing and traditional loans, the default rate for traditional loans was more than twice that of the others. If the vote share of religious political parties increases, borrowers are 'less likely to default during Ramadan and in large cities, which suggests that religion—whether through personal piety or network effects—may play a role in determining loan defaults.'
As of 2016, the key challenges facing the Islamic finance industry, including Islamic bonds (sukuk), according to the 2015/16 State of the Global Islamic Economy Report and International Monetary Fund data, include:
Public awareness and understanding of Islamic financial products and services are low, which keeps people from using them.
There is a need to improve regulatory clarity and coordination, strengthen cooperation between Islamic and traditional financial standard-setters, and further improve regulatory tools. This is to address the complex financial products and company structures in some countries where regulatory frameworks fail to handle risks specific to the industry.
There is a scarcity of monetary policy tools that follow halal rules and a lack of understanding of monetary transmission mechanisms.
Underdeveloped safety nets and resolution frameworks. A lack of a complete Islamic deposit insurance system, where insurance premiums cannot be invested in halal assets, or a lack of a halal lender of last resort.
Regulators do not always have the ability or the will to ensure compliance with Islamic law.
Imitating traditional finance.
Some supporters of Islamic banking, such as Taqi Usmani, D. M. Qureshi, Saleh Abdullah Kamel, and Harris Irfan, and skeptics like Muhammad Akram Khan, Mohammad Omar Farooq, Feisal Khan, Mahmoud El-Gamal, and Timur Kuran, have studied the differences between Islamic and traditional banks and expressed regret over their similarities.
Taqi Usmani argues that Islamic banking has completely ignored its basic philosophy. First, it ignores the risk-sharing model (musharaka) between the financier and the user of funds, preferring fixed markup models like cost-plus financing (murabahah) and leasing (ijarah), which theoretically should only be used when risk-sharing is impractical. Second, it ignores the rules of cost-plus financing (murabahah) and leasing (ijarah) themselves. For example, it uses murabahah financing to borrow cash without even buying any goods in the process, or uses leasing (ijarah) where the lessor does not take responsibility for ownership or provide the lessee with any rights of use.
Interest rate benchmarks are used to set Islamic profit rates, so the net result is not substantially different from interest-based transactions. Ignoring these basic principles weakens the influence of Islamic banking among non-Muslims and especially the general public. Usmani believes the public now has the impression that Islamic banking is just a matter of swapping documents.
In March 2009, Usmani declared that 85% of Islamic bonds (sukuk) were non-Islamic. At the time, Usmani was the chairman of the Sharia board for the Accounting and Auditing Organization for Islamic Financial Institutions (AAOIFI), which sets standards for the global Islamic banking industry. Others, such as Hassan Heikal, have also criticized the authenticity of Islamic bonds.
Another pioneer of the Islamic banking industry, DM Qureshi, told a questioner at a 2005 Islamic banking conference, 'With all due respect, today's Islamic banking is a labeling industry.' Everything traditional is just given a new label, and then you call it Islamic.
Mohammad Najatuallah Siddiqui also criticized the trend of copying traditional interest-based financial tools and making minor changes to terms and phrases, such as using sukuk for bonds or tawarruq for loans. He said this trend gives Islamic finance a bad reputation. One Islamic bank, Lariba, even issued a fatwa from its Sharia board, which included famous Sheikh Yusuf al-Qaradawi, stating: 'We have reached a consensus that there is no objection to using the word interest to replace profit or rate of return.' Siddiqui stated that practitioners of Islamic finance are eager to prove in theory that their finance is different from traditional finance, but in reality:
They are busy finding ways to make them similar. Starting around the 1980s, Sharia advisors mainly focused on designing alternatives to financial products that were already familiar to the market while trying to keep them compliant with Sharia.
A Muslim banker at Deutsche Bank, Harris Irfan, wrote about how he felt when selling Islamic banking products that did not truly comply with Sharia. He complained that he felt like a fraud, suffering from incoherent pietism and cognitive dissonance while trying to fit a square peg into a round hole.
Muhammad Akram Khan, a senior expert in Islamic economics, criticized Islamic banks for claiming to build their business on something other than interest while designing a series of tricks and ruses to hide interest.
Mahmoud Amin El-Gamal and Mohammad Fadel complained that Islamic banks charge fees that are too high. Fadel described the foundation of the industry as charging fees to create financial products that seem to meet the formal requirements of Islamic law while keeping all the economic features of traditional products.
El-Gamal described modern Islamic finance as Sharia arbitrage, which means taking advantage of price differences between Islamic and traditional markets because devout Muslims are willing to pay extra for financing they believe follows Sharia. In this system, a bank's Sharia board earns fees by finding a suitable classical Arabic name for an Islamic-style product and using that name to justify the Islamic brand and make it seem more credible.
According to Sayyid Tahir:
There is no evidence that the arrangements of Islamic banks are based on any kind of Sharia foundation. For example, the formulas for legal liquidity requirements, capital adequacy, and risk management standards in Islamic banks are the same as those in interest-based banks.
According to AW Duskuki and Abdelazeem Abozaid, the only difference investigators might find between Islamic finance and traditional finance is
in technical details and legal form, but the substance is the same. In fact, Islamic bankers use the same financial calculations as other bankers to figure out the present and future value of investments. Therefore, in the end, skeptical Muslims and other critical outsiders will find that Islamic banks actually charge interest, just under a different name like commission or profit.
Saleh Abdullah Kamel, the 1997 winner of the IDB Islamic Banking Prize, has a different view. He pointed out that the industry only has most of the features of traditional banking.
The investment models favored by Islamic banks have turned into a mix of loans and investments. This hybrid model has most of the features of interest-based loans and the flaws of the Western capitalist system. It does not highlight the features of Islamic investment based on risk-sharing and actual investment. It does not recognize the guarantee of capital and its returns.
Another criticism of mimicking traditional banking (raised by Mahmoud El-Gamal) is that imitating the 'past returns and past trends' of traditional finance, such as seeking to be the first bank to offer an 'Islamic hedge fund,' can bring huge initial profit margins. This is because the imitator is a 'first mover' in the Islamic finance industry and has 'access to monopoly markets and free indirect publicity.' This tempts other banks to try to follow suit, but long-term returns are often limited.
Skeptics of the industry have offered several explanations for why they believe the industry has failed to provide a real alternative to traditional banking. According to MO Farooq, Sharia boards face pressure, and it is indeed difficult to review the institutions that pay their salaries, which is a modern version of the medieval 'court ulama'.
Feisal Khan argues that Islamic banking is caught in a 'vicious cycle' where traditional piety conflicts with feasibility. Inspired by the Islamic revival movement, a large number of pious Muslims seek to finance, invest, and save in ways that do not use interest and 'standard debt contracts'. Efforts to provide interest-free alternatives that truly comply with Sharia—'participatory' or 'profit and loss sharing' financing—have failed because, in most cases, information asymmetry between the financier and the recipient makes this financing model unprofitable. Large banks are unwilling to let this obstacle stop them from profiting from the vast market of pious Muslims, so they look for 'scholars willing to certify traditional instruments as Sharia-compliant' and give more business to the most helpful scholars. The result is a 'fairly wide' range of financial products and services that 'closely' mimic traditional products and services but come with Sharia certification, which adds extra transaction costs.
Another explanation given by Farooq, citing Muhammad Nejatullah Siddiqi, is the shortage of Sharia experts. Generally speaking, these experts have not received enough training in the intent or purpose of Islamic law, so they cannot evaluate the pros and cons of certain financial products. They also lack training in economics and cannot analyze the consequences of using complex financial transactions like tawarruq, which allows lenders to provide cash to borrowers in a way that complies with Islamic law but is more complex and costly than traditional loans.
Timur Kuran argues that the importance of the Islamic economic foundation in Islamic banking is that it is primarily a tool to reaffirm the primacy of Islam, and only secondarily a tool for radical economic change.
The promises and challenges of profit and risk sharing.
According to a 2006 paper by Suliman Hamdan Albalawi, at least in Saudi Arabia and Egypt, Islamic banks no longer use profit and loss sharing (PLS) techniques as a core principle, and Malaysia has also seen a decline.
A study on the most commonly used Islamic finance models found that PLS financing in major Islamic banks dropped from 17.34% in 1994-1996 to just 6.34% of total financing in 2000-2006. In the sample, debt-based contracts or debt-like instruments were more popular. During the 2004-2006 period, 54.42% of financing was based on murabaha, 16.31% on ijara, and 5.60% on salam and istisna. Another survey of the largest Islamic banks released in 2010 found that the use of PLS ranged between 0.5% and 21.6%.
Authors Humayon A. Dar and J. R. Presley explain why PLS tools, where the financier provides capital and partnership financing, have dropped to a negligible percentage, including:
Bank clients have a strong incentive to report less profit than they actually earn, because the higher the declared profit, the more money the client must pay to the financing bank. This puts banks at a disadvantage when using PLS compared to using fixed-income models.
Property rights are not clearly defined in most Muslim countries, which makes it hard to share profits and losses.
Islamic banks compete with traditional banks that have deep roots and hundreds of years of experience. Islamic banks are still unsure about their own policies and practices, so they avoid taking on risks they cannot predict.
Profit and Loss Sharing (PLS) is often not suitable or possible for things like short-term resource needs, working capital, or non-profit projects in education and health.
In some countries, interest is treated as a business expense and is tax-free, but profit is taxed as income. Because of this, business clients who get funding through PLS pay higher taxes than those who take out loans and pay interest.
At least as of 2001, there was no secondary market for Islamic financial products based on PLS.
As a form of PLS, profit-sharing partnership (mudaraba) gives bank shareholders limited control and leads to an unbalanced governance structure. Shareholders want a consistent and complementary control system, but profit-sharing partnership (mudaraba) financing lacks this.
The industry has not been able to get customers to accept the periodic losses (the L in PLS) that come with investments. The profit-sharing partnership (mudarabah) feature, where bank clients and investors share in the bank's losses, is thought to make Islamic financial institutions more stable than traditional banks. In its 2015 paper, Islamic Finance: Opportunities, Challenges, and Policy Options, the International Monetary Fund listed ensuring that profit-sharing investment accounts (PSIA), also known as profit-sharing partnership (mudarabah) accounts, are handled in a way that keeps the financial system stable as a major regulatory challenge. Supporters like Taqi Usmani argue that normal trade activities naturally lead to occasional losses. They believe that expecting stable returns without any risk of loss is an unnatural product of capitalist banking, caused by separating finance from normal trade. Over decades of development, Islamic banking has faced bad debts and even major financial difficulties, such as the significant corruption scandal at the Dubai Islamic Bank in 1998.
However, at least up until 2004, no Islamic bank had passed bad debts on to its depositors. No Islamic bank reduced the value of depositor accounts when writing down the value of bad assets for fear of losing those depositors.
Beyond the disadvantages for lenders, critic Feisal Khan argues that the widespread use of profit and loss sharing (PLS) could cause serious damage to the economy. He points out that if banks held direct equity in every business as required by profit-sharing contracts (mudarabah) and partnership contracts (musharakah), credit would shrink. Central banks would then be unable to use standard credit expansion methods, such as buying bonds or commercial paper, to prevent the liquidity crises that occur in modern economies. While purists like Usmani are correct that cost-plus financing (murabahah) and other fixed-income tools—which have already pushed out PLS—are essentially just another name for traditional banking, banning them in favor of more authentic profit and loss sharing might leave central banks unable to prevent economic contraction and extreme unemployment.
Besides ignoring profit and loss sharing in favor of cost-plus financing (murabahah), the industry is accused of failing to follow Islamic law rules for murabahah. It often fails to buy or sell the actual goods or inventory that are a key condition for compliance. Banks do this when they want to lend cash rather than fund a purchase, even though it adds extra costs without serving any other purpose. In 2008, Arabianbusiness.com complained that sometimes there were no goods at all, only cash flowing between banks, brokers, and borrowers. Often, the goods have nothing to do with the borrower's business, and there are not even enough existing goods in the world to account for all the transactions taking place. Two other researchers reported that billions of dollars in synthetic murabahah transactions have taken place in London over the years, with many people doubting whether the banks actually owned the deposits or even the underlying assets.
Early supporters of Islamic banking called for setting up different accounts for different types of deposits so that earnings could be distributed to each type. Critic Muhammad Akram Khan argues that, in reality, Islamic financial institutions pool all types of deposits together.
Critics complain that banks following Sharia rules often just take the word of the bank or the borrower that they are following compliance rules, without doing real audits to check if it is true. An observer (L. Al Nasser) complained that when dealing with peers in the industry, Sharia authorities show too much trust in their subjects. He said Sharia audits are needed to reach transparency and make sure institutions keep their promises to customers. Also, when doing outside Sharia audits, many auditors often complain about the high number of violations they see but cannot discuss because the records they check have been tampered with.
Illegal gains
Even though Islamic banks forbid charging interest, their profit margins are usually based on interest rates. Islamic banker Harris Irfan says there is no doubt that benchmarks like LIBOR are still necessary for Islamic banks, and most scholars accept this no matter how imperfect the solution seems. However, Muhammad Akram Khan wrote that following the traditional bank benchmark LIBOR goes against the original purpose of designing and offering Islamic financial products.
Skeptics also complain that the returns on Islamic bank accounts are very close to those of traditional banks, even though their different mechanisms should theoretically lead to different numbers. A 2014 study using the latest econometrics techniques looked at the long-term relationship between time deposit rates at traditional banks and participation banks (Islamic banks) in Turkey. It found that the time deposit rates of three out of four participation banks were significantly cointegrated with those of traditional banks, and the causal relationship between Islamic bank yields and traditional banks was permanent. Skeptics believe this closeness shows that Islamic banks manipulate their yields. These banks are often smaller and have weaker foundations, and they feel the need to reassure customers about their financial competitiveness and stability.
Liquidity issues
The Islamic banking and finance industry lacks a way to earn returns on money that is parked short-term while waiting for investment, which puts these banks at a disadvantage compared to traditional banks.
Banks and financial institutions must balance liquidity—the ability to quickly turn assets into cash or cash equivalents in an emergency without a big loss when depositors need it—with competitive rates of return on funds. Traditional banks use the interbank lending market to borrow money for liquidity needs and invest for any period, including very short terms, to boost their earnings. Calculating the return for any period is simple: just multiply the loan term by the interest rate.
However, the profit and loss sharing (PLS) model preferred in Islamic finance means profits can only be shared after the invested project is finished. Since you cannot determine profit or loss in the short term, money deposited for a short time does not earn any return. Islamic financial institutions cannot use traditional interbank lending markets for short-term borrowing.
Because there are few or not enough Islamic money market investment tools, as of 2002, the liquidity—or money without returns—held by Islamic banks was on average 40% higher than that of traditional banks. The Islamic Financial Services Board found that the daily volume of interbank transactions between Islamic financial institutions, between Islamic and traditional banks, and between Islamic financial institutions and central banks is very low compared to traditional money markets. While Muslim countries like Bahrain, Iran, Malaysia, and Sudan have started developing Islamic money markets and issuing securitized documents based on profit-sharing partnership (musharakah), profit-sharing investment (mudarabah), and leasing (ijarah), as of at least 2013, the lack of a proper and effective secondary market means these securities are much smaller in number than those in traditional capital markets.
Regarding non-PLS, or debt-based contracts, one study found that the business model of Islamic banks is changing over time and moving toward taking on more liquidity risk.
To solve the problem of money held for liquidity or lack of investment opportunities not earning a return, many Islamic financial institutions, such as the Islamic Development Bank and Faisal Islamic Bank of Egypt, openly earn interest from their excess funds, which are usually invested in safer debt-like or overseas debt instruments. Sharia experts do not forbid this practice, but instead provide the necessary religious rulings (fatwa) to comply with Sharia based on the rule of necessity (darurah). Researchers Frank Vogel and Frank Hayes write:
Islamic finance and banking scholars cite necessity to allow exceptions and relax rules. They issued fatwas allowing Islamic banks to deposit funds into interest-bearing accounts, especially abroad, because these banks have no other investments during periods of necessity. However, they usually attach conditions to such fatwas, such as requiring that illegal earnings be used for religious charitable purposes like charity, training, or research.
Lack of social responsibility
According to Islamic teachings, Islamic banks should adopt new financing policies and explore new investment channels to encourage development and improve the living standards of small-scale traders, but Taqi Usmani complains that few Islamic banks and financial institutions focus on this. Islamic scholar Mohammad Hashim Kamali regrets that Islamic banks focus on short-term financing, which mainly focuses on financing already produced goods rather than creating or increasing production capital or focusing on facilities like factories and infrastructure.
Muhammad Akram Khan also complains that in the process of merging with traditional banking, Islamic bank product development mimics traditional banking instead of building a different type of banking consistent with fair and equal income distribution and ethical investment models.
Another scholar, Mahmoud El-Gamal, also regrets that Islamic banks value form over substance and suggests rebranding Islamic finance to emphasize issues like community banking, microfinance, and socially responsible investment.
Criticisms from other unorthodox economists are even more intense.
Muhammad O. Farooq questions the basic premise of Islamic banking, arguing that it focuses on abolishing all interest at the expense of the big picture of pursuing overall economic justice, and cites the Quran's warning against the concentration of wealth:
Whatever Allah has restored to His Messenger from the people of the towns is for Allah and for the Messenger, and for the near relatives and the orphans and the needy and the wayfarer, so that it will not be a perpetual distribution among the rich from among you...
He questioned if greed and profit are bigger causes of exploitation than loan interest. He believes that in a competitive and regulated market, loan interest might not actually count as interest.
The Islamic banking and finance movement has adapted to political tyranny. It is supported by a small, wealthy class of rentiers in the Muslim world and is increasingly manipulated by global financial giants. Because of this, it is easily limited to just talking about opposing exploitation, and it might even unintentionally become a tool for exploitation itself. The real world is full of exploitation, such as child exploitation, sexual exploitation, and labor exploitation. Interest might only be a small part of global exploitation. However, supporters of Islamic economics and finance remain obsessed with interest.
He used the profit motive of the East India Company as an example. Before 1858, the company colonized and ruled India at the expense of the Muslim Mughal Empire, and its shares were equity rather than debt instruments. He found it curious that although books promoting Islamic banking and finance often claim that loan interest exploits the poor and Muslims, there is almost no empirical or focused research on exploitation or injustice within Islamic economics. For example, Farooq complained that in two important bibliographies on orthodox Islamic economics, there was not a single citation about exploitation or injustice. These were 'Muslim Economic Thought: A Survey of Contemporary Literature,' which had 700 entries under 51 subcategories across 115 pages, and 'Islamic Economics: Annotated Sources in English and Urdu' by Muhammad Akram Khan.
Timur Kuran complained that Islamic banks in Egypt and other Muslim countries follow Western banking practices and do little to help economic development or job creation. However, they do not follow the practices of Western venture capitalists, who have funded the global high-tech industry. Since the operating principles of venture capital are the same as profit and loss sharing, even though venture capital does not avoid haram (forbidden) products, using venture capital could bring huge benefits to Egypt and other poor Muslim countries seeking economic development.
Lack of uniformity in Sharia.
Most Islamic banks have their own Sharia boards to rule on bank policies. Researchers Frank Vogel and Frank Hayes believe the four schools of Sunni Islamic law (Madhhab) do not agree on Islamic banking practices. They apply Islamic teachings to business and finance in different ways. There are disagreements on specific points of religious law both between the four schools and within them. Also, Sharia boards sometimes change their minds and overturn previous decisions.
Ibrahim Warde asks if boards just rubber-stamp the banks that pay their salaries. Munawar Iqbal and Philip Molyneux say that disagreements between boards about what counts as Sharia-compliant can cause trouble, because customers might doubt if a bank is truly following the rules. If Islamic banks are not seen as truly Islamic, they will quickly lose most of their market.
Late payments and defaults.
In traditional finance, late payments or loan defaults are discouraged by interest that keeps adding up. Muhammad Akran Khan says that controlling and managing late accounts has become a thorny problem in Islamic finance. Although many suggestions have been made to fix the problem of overdue loans in Islamic banks, Ibrahim Warde says:
Islamic banks face serious issues with late payments, not to mention outright defaults, because some people use every legal and religious trick to delay. In most Islamic countries, various forms of fines and late fees have been set up, but they have been banned or found impossible to enforce. Late fees, in particular, have been treated the same as interest. Therefore, debtors know they can pay Islamic banks last because there is no cost for doing so.
Warde also complained:
Many business people who borrowed large amounts of money for a long time took advantage of the shift to Islamic finance. They paid back only the principal and wiped out the accumulated interest. Given the double-digit inflation over the years, this was usually a tiny amount.
How to deal with inflation
Inflation is also a problem for financing. Islamic banks do not copy traditional banks; they actually provide loans without interest or any other fees. Whether and how to compensate lenders for money that loses value due to inflation is a problem that "troubles" Islamic scholars. If lenders lose money by giving loans, businesses will not be able to get financing. Suggestions include indexing loans to inflation, which many scholars oppose because they think it is a form of interest and encourages inflation. Other ideas include measuring loans by commodities like gold, or doing more research to find an answer.
The influence of non-Muslims
Almost all, if not all, customers of Islamic banking and finance are Muslims. But most financial institutions that provide Islamic banking services are Western and owned by non-Muslims. Supporters of Islamic banking believe that the interest Western banks have in Islamic banking is proof of strong and growing market demand, and therefore an "achievement of the Islamic movement."
However, critics complain that these banks lack a deep commitment to the faith of Islamic banking, which means:
The Muslims hired at these institutions have almost no input into actual management. This leads the Muslim public to sometimes have well-founded doubts about how seriously these institutions follow Sharia law. A traditional Malaysian bank offering Islamic investment funds was found to have invested most of these funds in the gambling industry. The managers running these funds are not Muslim.
The interest from traditional banks does not show that Islamic banking is growing stronger. Instead, it shows how similar Islamic and traditional banks are, so the latter can enter the Islamic banking sector without making any real changes to their business. El-Gamal doubts whether the interest of large non-Muslim banks in Islamic finance comes from the profitability of Islamic financial business.
When the market hits a downturn, these banks are more likely to exit the industry. Harris Irfan believes that non-Muslim banks like Deutsche Bank lack an ideological commitment to Islamic banking, which has led and will continue to lead them to exit the industry when the market hits a downturn. In early 2011, during the bursting of the real estate bubble, Deutsche Bank did not keep a single dedicated Islamic structurer or salesperson. Islamic finance has become a luxury that banks cannot afford. Perhaps partly because of this, in February 2011, the Central Bank of Qatar ordered traditional lenders to close their Islamic operations in the country by the end of the year. The central bank insisted that it was too much for traditional banks to follow alternative capital adequacy rules for Islamic finance, and it was hard to supervise and monitor the Islamic and traditional operations of commercial banks because depositors' funds would get mixed together.
Stability/Risk
Opinions differ on whether Islamic banking is more stable and carries less risk than traditional banking.
Supporters, such as Bank Negara Malaysia Governor Zeti Akhtar Aziz, believe that Islamic financial institutions are more stable than traditional banks because they forbid speculation and, in theory, the two main types of Islamic bank accounts—current accounts and profit-sharing accounts (mudarabah)—pose less risk to the bank.
In a current account, customers do not earn any return, and there is theoretically no risk of loss because the bank does not invest the funds in the account.
In a profit-sharing investment account (mudaraba), an Islamic bank faces less risk from loan defaults because it shares this risk with the depositors. If a borrower cannot repay some or all of the money the bank lent them, the amount distributed to depositors decreases by the same amount. In a traditional bank, depositors receive fixed interest payments regardless of whether the bank's income drops due to loan defaults.
Critics complain that this stability comes at the cost of the stability of the account balances for depositors or partners—a term Islamic banks often use instead of customers or depositors—who face risks that those in traditional banks do not. a critic named Mahmoud A. El-Gamal argues:
In these institutions, investment account holders have neither the protection of creditors in an Islamic financial institution nor the protection of equity holders represented on the institution's board. This introduces many other well-documented risk factors to the institution.
On the other hand, Habib Ahmed wrote shortly after the 2009 financial crisis that the practice of Islamic finance has gradually moved closer to traditional finance, which exposes it to the same dangers of instability.
When looking at the practice of Islamic finance and its operating environment, one can find trends similar to those that led to the current crisis. Recently, stock and real estate markets in the Gulf region have also experienced speculative events. Finally, the Islamic finance industry has grown rapidly with the innovation of complex financial products that comply with Sharia law. The risks of these new Islamic financial products are complex because these tools involve multiple types of risk.
In any case, several Islamic banks have failed over the decades. In 1988, the Islamic investment company Ar-Ryan collapsed, causing thousands of small investors to lose their savings. Later, an anonymous donor from a Gulf country covered their losses. This was a heavy blow to Islamic finance at the time. In 1998, the management of Bank al Taqwa collapsed. Its annual report stated that depositors and shareholders lost more than 23% of their principal. It was later discovered that management violated bank rules by investing more than 60% of the bank's assets into a single project.
Turkey's Ihlas Finance House closed in 2001 due to liquidity problems and financial distress. Faisal Islamic Bank also ran into difficulties and closed its operations in the UK for regulatory reasons. According to The Economist magazine, the 2009 Dubai debt crisis showed that Islamic bonds could help inflate debt to unsustainable levels.
Economic recession
According to a 2010 survey by the International Monetary Fund, Islamic banks showed stronger resilience on average than conventional banks during the 2007 to 2008 financial crisis, but they faced greater losses when the crisis hit the real economy.
At the start of the 2007-2009 Great Recession, Islamic banks were unscathed. One supporter of Islamic banking wrote that the collapse of major Wall Street institutions, especially Lehman Brothers, should encourage economists worldwide to look at Islamic banking and finance as an alternative model. However, the impact of the financial recession gradually shifted to the real sector, affecting the Islamic banking industry. According to Ibrahim Warde, this shows that Islamic finance is not a panacea, and a faith-based system is not automatically immune to the unpredictability of the financial system.
Concentrated ownership
Munawar Iqbal and Philip Molyneux believe that concentrated ownership is another danger to the stability of the Islamic banking and finance industry. They wrote:
Three or four families own a large portion of the industry's shares. If anything happens to these families, or if the next generation of these families changes their priorities, this concentration of ownership could lead to serious financial instability and potentially cause the industry to collapse. Similarly, the experience of national-level trials is mostly based on the initiatives of non-elected rulers.
Macroeconomic risks
Harris Irafan warns that the macroeconomic risks of Islamic banking create a multi-billion dollar ticking time bomb of unhedged currency and interest rates. The difficulty, complexity, and cost of hedging these currencies and interest rates in a proper Islamic way are so high that as of 2015, the Islamic Development Bank was losing cash rapidly, as if it were funding a war. Without relying on conventional markets, it simply cannot consistently exchange dollars for euros or vice versa. Regional Islamic banks in the Middle East and Malaysia do not have trained professionals to understand and negotiate Sharia-compliant treasury swaps, nor are they willing to hire consultants with experience in this area.
High costs and low efficiency
Mohamed El-Gamal believes that because Islamic financial products mimic traditional ones but operate under Sharia rules, they require extra fees for jurists and lawyers, plus costs for multiple sales, special purpose vehicles, and ownership documentation. There are also costs linked to the special structures Islamic banks use for late payment penalties. Because of this, their financing costs are often higher than traditional products, while account returns are often lower.
El-Gamal also argues that another reason for the inefficiency and higher costs of Islamic banking, and why it always lags behind new financial products in the traditional industry, is the reliance on classical nominal contracts like cost-plus financing (murabaha) and leasing (ijara). These contracts follow classical texts written during a time when financial markets were very limited. They cannot untangle various risks, whereas modern financial markets and institutions like money markets, capital markets, and options markets are designed specifically to do that. On the other hand, improving the efficiency of these contracts or products alienates pious customers who believe they should follow classical forms.
In a major part of the financial market—home buying—Islamic finance could not compete with traditional finance in countries like the UK, Canada, and the US as of 2002 in the UK and 2009 in North America. According to Humayon Dar, the monthly payments for Sharia-compliant leasing contracts used by the Islamic investment banking division of Ahli United Bank in the UK were much higher than equivalent traditional mortgages. According to Hans Visser, the cost of Islamic home financing in Canada was 100 to 300 basis points higher than traditional financing, and 40 to 100 basis points higher in the United States. Visser believes Islamic loan financing costs more because Islamic loans have higher risk weights compared to traditional mortgages under international standards for minimum bank capital requirements set by Basel I and Basel II. In some cases, the Islamic profit rate is the same as a traditional mortgage rate, but the closing costs are several hundred dollars higher.
Reports by M. Kabir Hassan in 2005 and 2006 show that Islamic banks dominated by cost-plus financing (murabaha) are not very efficient. The banks studied had an average cost efficiency of 74% and an average profit efficiency of 84%. Although Islamic banks are less efficient at controlling costs, they are generally more efficient at generating profits. A later report on efficiency indicators like cost, allocation, technology, pure technology, and scale noted that, on average, the efficiency of the Islamic banking industry is relatively low compared to traditional banks in other parts of the world.
Other studies found that the efficiency of Islamic banks is, on average, slightly lower than traditional banks in non-Muslim majority regions, measured by bank revenue minus the profits paid to depositors.
This includes studies of Malaysian banks from 1997 to 2003 and Turkish Islamic banks between 1999 and 2001.
In contrast, a multi-country study covering a similar period from 1999 to 2005 found no significant difference in overall efficiency, according to a 2008 study that measured the cost, revenue, and profit efficiency of 43 Islamic banks and 37 traditional banks across 21 countries.
Common explanations for the flaws in the Islamic banking industry from the Islamic finance movement, as noted by M. O. Farooq, are:
Industry problems and challenges are part of a learning curve that will be solved over time.
Unless the industry operates within an Islamic society and environment, it will be hindered by non-Islamic influences and cannot operate according to its true nature.
While the truth of the second explanation cannot be verified until a complete Islamic society is established, Feisal Khan points out regarding the first defense that the industry has shown little evidence of progress since that argument was first made in 1993. That year, critic Timur Kuran highlighted problems in the industry, noting that Islamic banks are basically similar to traditional banks in practice, marginalizing equity-based, risk-sharing models while embracing short-term products and debt-like instruments, while supporter Ausaf Ahmad defended the industry by saying it was in the early stages of transitioning from traditional banking.
Seventeen years later, Islamic finance supporter Ibrahim Warde lamented that murabaha and similar sales products have not disappeared but have grown significantly, and today they make up the bulk of most Islamic banking business.
Most critics of Islamic banking call for more orthodoxy, doubling down on efforts to strictly enforce Sharia law. Some people, like M. O. Farooq and M. A. Khan, blame the industry's problems on treating loan interest as forbidden interest (riba) and the impracticality of trying to enforce that ban.
Finally, I am borrowing an article written by Talha Ahmed Iftikhar on his blog:
Not long ago, my friend wanted to buy furniture from a company that advertised that customers could use interest-free loans for up to 6 months provided by several banks to purchase their products. He decided to get this loan from an Islamic bank to stay compliant with Sharia, but he was shocked when the bank told him his invoice would increase by 30% because it included a profit margin. Then, the deal would be converted into a credit sale contract, and the amount would be paid back in installments over 6 months.
I asked the CEO how an Islamic bank could charge a 30% profit to someone who did not have the money to pay the full amount at once. Isn't this the strong exploiting the weak? Is this the same as the riba or usury that is condemned? His answer left me very confused: "We charge the same fees as the market." For those in need, we have a charity department. They call it a transaction. I left the meeting right away.
Murabaha is not a form of trade, but a banking product designed to trick Muslims into interest-based debt traps. Using it as an Islamic financing model must stop immediately, or at the very least, banks should be banned from using Islam to sell this product. Usury, or riba, is at the heart of an unfair economic system where the strong get stronger at the expense of the weak. Top officials at Islamic banks admit that this product hides the same interest rates used by other banks, which clearly shows these products will never help achieve social justice. view all
Summary: This Muslim knowledge guide presents a critical look at Islamic finance, including Sharia compliance, profit-and-loss sharing, murabaha, interest benchmarks, social justice concerns, scholar critiques, banking practice, and the gap between ideal Islamic finance and real-world banking.
This article is a collection and compilation of critiques on Islamic finance. The content mainly comes from the English Wikipedia entry 'Challenges in Islamic finance' and various scholars' blogs. The skepticism from these foreign scholars shows that so-called 'Islamic finance' is not as competitive as we imagine. It has many problems and perhaps should not even be promoted under the name 'Islamic'.

The challenge facing Islamic finance is the difficulty of providing modern financial services without violating Sharia law. The development of the Islamic banking and finance industry centers on avoiding interest, which is seen as an unjust and exploitative gain in trade or business.
Most Islamic banking customers come from the Gulf and developed countries in the Muslim world. Challenges include the fact that interest rate benchmarks have been used to set Islamic 'profit' rates, so the 'net returns are not substantially different from interest-based transactions'. In essence, Islamic banking is 'nothing more than a matter of changing contracts...'.
Religiously, Islamic finance prefers a profit and loss sharing (PLS) model. However, this causes problems, including the need to wait for investment projects to generate earnings before profits can be distributed, which increases risk and complexity for financial service providers.
The Islamic finance industry has been praised for developing a 'theory' into an industry worth about 2 trillion US dollars. It has attracted banking users who could not use traditional banking services for religious reasons, drawn non-Muslim bankers into the field, and (according to other supporters) introduced a more stable and lower-risk form of financing.
However, the industry is also criticized for ignoring its 'basic philosophy' and moving in the wrong direction for decades, leading both outsiders and ordinary Muslims to question it. First, it abandoned the original financing method advocated by its promoters—risk-sharing financing—in favor of fixed-markup purchase financing (especially murabaha). It then distorted the rules of fixed-markup murabaha to effectively provide traditional cash interest loans like conventional interest rates, but disguised them with 'word games' while bearing 'higher costs and greater risks'.
Other issues and complaints raised include that the industry has made no effort to help small vendors and the poor. How to deal with the problem of inflation; Delayed payments; A lack of currency and interest rate hedging; Or a lack of short-term cash deposit accounts that follow Sharia law; Most Islamic banking businesses are owned by non-Muslims;
In a series of interviews with Pakistani banking professionals (traditional and Islamic bankers, Sharia banking advisors, business people using finance, and management consultants) in 2008 and 2010, economist Faisal Khan noted that many Islamic bankers expressed 'skepticism' about the differences, or lack thereof, between traditional and Islamic banking products. He also noted a lack of external Sharia compliance audit requirements for Islamic banks in Pakistan, and that Sharia boards lacked awareness of their banks failing to follow Sharia-compliant practices or were unable to stop them. However, this did not stop devout people from using the banks (one person explained that if his Islamic bank was not truly following Sharia, 'the punishment is on their heads, not mine!'); I have done what I can do.
An estimate of customer preferences in the Pakistani banking industry (provided by a Pakistani banker) is that about 10% of customers are 'strictly traditional banking customers,' 20% are strictly Sharia-compliant banking customers, and 70% prefer Sharia-compliant banking but will use traditional banking if the 'price difference is significant.' A survey of Islamic and traditional banking customers found that Islamic banking customers were more observant (attending Hajj, performing namaz, keeping a beard, etc.), but they also had higher savings account balances than traditional banking customers, were older, better educated, traveled abroad more, and tended to open a second account at a traditional bank. Another study using 'official data' reported to the State Bank of Pakistan found that for lenders who received both Islamic (murabaha) financing and traditional loans, the default rate for traditional loans was more than twice that of the others. If the vote share of religious political parties increases, borrowers are 'less likely to default during Ramadan and in large cities, which suggests that religion—whether through personal piety or network effects—may play a role in determining loan defaults.'
As of 2016, the key challenges facing the Islamic finance industry, including Islamic bonds (sukuk), according to the 2015/16 State of the Global Islamic Economy Report and International Monetary Fund data, include:
Public awareness and understanding of Islamic financial products and services are low, which keeps people from using them.
There is a need to improve regulatory clarity and coordination, strengthen cooperation between Islamic and traditional financial standard-setters, and further improve regulatory tools. This is to address the complex financial products and company structures in some countries where regulatory frameworks fail to handle risks specific to the industry.
There is a scarcity of monetary policy tools that follow halal rules and a lack of understanding of monetary transmission mechanisms.
Underdeveloped safety nets and resolution frameworks. A lack of a complete Islamic deposit insurance system, where insurance premiums cannot be invested in halal assets, or a lack of a halal lender of last resort.
Regulators do not always have the ability or the will to ensure compliance with Islamic law.
Imitating traditional finance.
Some supporters of Islamic banking, such as Taqi Usmani, D. M. Qureshi, Saleh Abdullah Kamel, and Harris Irfan, and skeptics like Muhammad Akram Khan, Mohammad Omar Farooq, Feisal Khan, Mahmoud El-Gamal, and Timur Kuran, have studied the differences between Islamic and traditional banks and expressed regret over their similarities.
Taqi Usmani argues that Islamic banking has completely ignored its basic philosophy. First, it ignores the risk-sharing model (musharaka) between the financier and the user of funds, preferring fixed markup models like cost-plus financing (murabahah) and leasing (ijarah), which theoretically should only be used when risk-sharing is impractical. Second, it ignores the rules of cost-plus financing (murabahah) and leasing (ijarah) themselves. For example, it uses murabahah financing to borrow cash without even buying any goods in the process, or uses leasing (ijarah) where the lessor does not take responsibility for ownership or provide the lessee with any rights of use.
Interest rate benchmarks are used to set Islamic profit rates, so the net result is not substantially different from interest-based transactions. Ignoring these basic principles weakens the influence of Islamic banking among non-Muslims and especially the general public. Usmani believes the public now has the impression that Islamic banking is just a matter of swapping documents.
In March 2009, Usmani declared that 85% of Islamic bonds (sukuk) were non-Islamic. At the time, Usmani was the chairman of the Sharia board for the Accounting and Auditing Organization for Islamic Financial Institutions (AAOIFI), which sets standards for the global Islamic banking industry. Others, such as Hassan Heikal, have also criticized the authenticity of Islamic bonds.
Another pioneer of the Islamic banking industry, DM Qureshi, told a questioner at a 2005 Islamic banking conference, 'With all due respect, today's Islamic banking is a labeling industry.' Everything traditional is just given a new label, and then you call it Islamic.
Mohammad Najatuallah Siddiqui also criticized the trend of copying traditional interest-based financial tools and making minor changes to terms and phrases, such as using sukuk for bonds or tawarruq for loans. He said this trend gives Islamic finance a bad reputation. One Islamic bank, Lariba, even issued a fatwa from its Sharia board, which included famous Sheikh Yusuf al-Qaradawi, stating: 'We have reached a consensus that there is no objection to using the word interest to replace profit or rate of return.' Siddiqui stated that practitioners of Islamic finance are eager to prove in theory that their finance is different from traditional finance, but in reality:
They are busy finding ways to make them similar. Starting around the 1980s, Sharia advisors mainly focused on designing alternatives to financial products that were already familiar to the market while trying to keep them compliant with Sharia.
A Muslim banker at Deutsche Bank, Harris Irfan, wrote about how he felt when selling Islamic banking products that did not truly comply with Sharia. He complained that he felt like a fraud, suffering from incoherent pietism and cognitive dissonance while trying to fit a square peg into a round hole.
Muhammad Akram Khan, a senior expert in Islamic economics, criticized Islamic banks for claiming to build their business on something other than interest while designing a series of tricks and ruses to hide interest.
Mahmoud Amin El-Gamal and Mohammad Fadel complained that Islamic banks charge fees that are too high. Fadel described the foundation of the industry as charging fees to create financial products that seem to meet the formal requirements of Islamic law while keeping all the economic features of traditional products.
El-Gamal described modern Islamic finance as Sharia arbitrage, which means taking advantage of price differences between Islamic and traditional markets because devout Muslims are willing to pay extra for financing they believe follows Sharia. In this system, a bank's Sharia board earns fees by finding a suitable classical Arabic name for an Islamic-style product and using that name to justify the Islamic brand and make it seem more credible.
According to Sayyid Tahir:
There is no evidence that the arrangements of Islamic banks are based on any kind of Sharia foundation. For example, the formulas for legal liquidity requirements, capital adequacy, and risk management standards in Islamic banks are the same as those in interest-based banks.
According to AW Duskuki and Abdelazeem Abozaid, the only difference investigators might find between Islamic finance and traditional finance is
in technical details and legal form, but the substance is the same. In fact, Islamic bankers use the same financial calculations as other bankers to figure out the present and future value of investments. Therefore, in the end, skeptical Muslims and other critical outsiders will find that Islamic banks actually charge interest, just under a different name like commission or profit.
Saleh Abdullah Kamel, the 1997 winner of the IDB Islamic Banking Prize, has a different view. He pointed out that the industry only has most of the features of traditional banking.
The investment models favored by Islamic banks have turned into a mix of loans and investments. This hybrid model has most of the features of interest-based loans and the flaws of the Western capitalist system. It does not highlight the features of Islamic investment based on risk-sharing and actual investment. It does not recognize the guarantee of capital and its returns.
Another criticism of mimicking traditional banking (raised by Mahmoud El-Gamal) is that imitating the 'past returns and past trends' of traditional finance, such as seeking to be the first bank to offer an 'Islamic hedge fund,' can bring huge initial profit margins. This is because the imitator is a 'first mover' in the Islamic finance industry and has 'access to monopoly markets and free indirect publicity.' This tempts other banks to try to follow suit, but long-term returns are often limited.
Skeptics of the industry have offered several explanations for why they believe the industry has failed to provide a real alternative to traditional banking. According to MO Farooq, Sharia boards face pressure, and it is indeed difficult to review the institutions that pay their salaries, which is a modern version of the medieval 'court ulama'.
Feisal Khan argues that Islamic banking is caught in a 'vicious cycle' where traditional piety conflicts with feasibility. Inspired by the Islamic revival movement, a large number of pious Muslims seek to finance, invest, and save in ways that do not use interest and 'standard debt contracts'. Efforts to provide interest-free alternatives that truly comply with Sharia—'participatory' or 'profit and loss sharing' financing—have failed because, in most cases, information asymmetry between the financier and the recipient makes this financing model unprofitable. Large banks are unwilling to let this obstacle stop them from profiting from the vast market of pious Muslims, so they look for 'scholars willing to certify traditional instruments as Sharia-compliant' and give more business to the most helpful scholars. The result is a 'fairly wide' range of financial products and services that 'closely' mimic traditional products and services but come with Sharia certification, which adds extra transaction costs.
Another explanation given by Farooq, citing Muhammad Nejatullah Siddiqi, is the shortage of Sharia experts. Generally speaking, these experts have not received enough training in the intent or purpose of Islamic law, so they cannot evaluate the pros and cons of certain financial products. They also lack training in economics and cannot analyze the consequences of using complex financial transactions like tawarruq, which allows lenders to provide cash to borrowers in a way that complies with Islamic law but is more complex and costly than traditional loans.
Timur Kuran argues that the importance of the Islamic economic foundation in Islamic banking is that it is primarily a tool to reaffirm the primacy of Islam, and only secondarily a tool for radical economic change.
The promises and challenges of profit and risk sharing.
According to a 2006 paper by Suliman Hamdan Albalawi, at least in Saudi Arabia and Egypt, Islamic banks no longer use profit and loss sharing (PLS) techniques as a core principle, and Malaysia has also seen a decline.
A study on the most commonly used Islamic finance models found that PLS financing in major Islamic banks dropped from 17.34% in 1994-1996 to just 6.34% of total financing in 2000-2006. In the sample, debt-based contracts or debt-like instruments were more popular. During the 2004-2006 period, 54.42% of financing was based on murabaha, 16.31% on ijara, and 5.60% on salam and istisna. Another survey of the largest Islamic banks released in 2010 found that the use of PLS ranged between 0.5% and 21.6%.
Authors Humayon A. Dar and J. R. Presley explain why PLS tools, where the financier provides capital and partnership financing, have dropped to a negligible percentage, including:
Bank clients have a strong incentive to report less profit than they actually earn, because the higher the declared profit, the more money the client must pay to the financing bank. This puts banks at a disadvantage when using PLS compared to using fixed-income models.
Property rights are not clearly defined in most Muslim countries, which makes it hard to share profits and losses.
Islamic banks compete with traditional banks that have deep roots and hundreds of years of experience. Islamic banks are still unsure about their own policies and practices, so they avoid taking on risks they cannot predict.
Profit and Loss Sharing (PLS) is often not suitable or possible for things like short-term resource needs, working capital, or non-profit projects in education and health.
In some countries, interest is treated as a business expense and is tax-free, but profit is taxed as income. Because of this, business clients who get funding through PLS pay higher taxes than those who take out loans and pay interest.
At least as of 2001, there was no secondary market for Islamic financial products based on PLS.
As a form of PLS, profit-sharing partnership (mudaraba) gives bank shareholders limited control and leads to an unbalanced governance structure. Shareholders want a consistent and complementary control system, but profit-sharing partnership (mudaraba) financing lacks this.
The industry has not been able to get customers to accept the periodic losses (the L in PLS) that come with investments. The profit-sharing partnership (mudarabah) feature, where bank clients and investors share in the bank's losses, is thought to make Islamic financial institutions more stable than traditional banks. In its 2015 paper, Islamic Finance: Opportunities, Challenges, and Policy Options, the International Monetary Fund listed ensuring that profit-sharing investment accounts (PSIA), also known as profit-sharing partnership (mudarabah) accounts, are handled in a way that keeps the financial system stable as a major regulatory challenge. Supporters like Taqi Usmani argue that normal trade activities naturally lead to occasional losses. They believe that expecting stable returns without any risk of loss is an unnatural product of capitalist banking, caused by separating finance from normal trade. Over decades of development, Islamic banking has faced bad debts and even major financial difficulties, such as the significant corruption scandal at the Dubai Islamic Bank in 1998.
However, at least up until 2004, no Islamic bank had passed bad debts on to its depositors. No Islamic bank reduced the value of depositor accounts when writing down the value of bad assets for fear of losing those depositors.
Beyond the disadvantages for lenders, critic Feisal Khan argues that the widespread use of profit and loss sharing (PLS) could cause serious damage to the economy. He points out that if banks held direct equity in every business as required by profit-sharing contracts (mudarabah) and partnership contracts (musharakah), credit would shrink. Central banks would then be unable to use standard credit expansion methods, such as buying bonds or commercial paper, to prevent the liquidity crises that occur in modern economies. While purists like Usmani are correct that cost-plus financing (murabahah) and other fixed-income tools—which have already pushed out PLS—are essentially just another name for traditional banking, banning them in favor of more authentic profit and loss sharing might leave central banks unable to prevent economic contraction and extreme unemployment.
Besides ignoring profit and loss sharing in favor of cost-plus financing (murabahah), the industry is accused of failing to follow Islamic law rules for murabahah. It often fails to buy or sell the actual goods or inventory that are a key condition for compliance. Banks do this when they want to lend cash rather than fund a purchase, even though it adds extra costs without serving any other purpose. In 2008, Arabianbusiness.com complained that sometimes there were no goods at all, only cash flowing between banks, brokers, and borrowers. Often, the goods have nothing to do with the borrower's business, and there are not even enough existing goods in the world to account for all the transactions taking place. Two other researchers reported that billions of dollars in synthetic murabahah transactions have taken place in London over the years, with many people doubting whether the banks actually owned the deposits or even the underlying assets.
Early supporters of Islamic banking called for setting up different accounts for different types of deposits so that earnings could be distributed to each type. Critic Muhammad Akram Khan argues that, in reality, Islamic financial institutions pool all types of deposits together.
Critics complain that banks following Sharia rules often just take the word of the bank or the borrower that they are following compliance rules, without doing real audits to check if it is true. An observer (L. Al Nasser) complained that when dealing with peers in the industry, Sharia authorities show too much trust in their subjects. He said Sharia audits are needed to reach transparency and make sure institutions keep their promises to customers. Also, when doing outside Sharia audits, many auditors often complain about the high number of violations they see but cannot discuss because the records they check have been tampered with.
Illegal gains
Even though Islamic banks forbid charging interest, their profit margins are usually based on interest rates. Islamic banker Harris Irfan says there is no doubt that benchmarks like LIBOR are still necessary for Islamic banks, and most scholars accept this no matter how imperfect the solution seems. However, Muhammad Akram Khan wrote that following the traditional bank benchmark LIBOR goes against the original purpose of designing and offering Islamic financial products.
Skeptics also complain that the returns on Islamic bank accounts are very close to those of traditional banks, even though their different mechanisms should theoretically lead to different numbers. A 2014 study using the latest econometrics techniques looked at the long-term relationship between time deposit rates at traditional banks and participation banks (Islamic banks) in Turkey. It found that the time deposit rates of three out of four participation banks were significantly cointegrated with those of traditional banks, and the causal relationship between Islamic bank yields and traditional banks was permanent. Skeptics believe this closeness shows that Islamic banks manipulate their yields. These banks are often smaller and have weaker foundations, and they feel the need to reassure customers about their financial competitiveness and stability.
Liquidity issues
The Islamic banking and finance industry lacks a way to earn returns on money that is parked short-term while waiting for investment, which puts these banks at a disadvantage compared to traditional banks.
Banks and financial institutions must balance liquidity—the ability to quickly turn assets into cash or cash equivalents in an emergency without a big loss when depositors need it—with competitive rates of return on funds. Traditional banks use the interbank lending market to borrow money for liquidity needs and invest for any period, including very short terms, to boost their earnings. Calculating the return for any period is simple: just multiply the loan term by the interest rate.
However, the profit and loss sharing (PLS) model preferred in Islamic finance means profits can only be shared after the invested project is finished. Since you cannot determine profit or loss in the short term, money deposited for a short time does not earn any return. Islamic financial institutions cannot use traditional interbank lending markets for short-term borrowing.
Because there are few or not enough Islamic money market investment tools, as of 2002, the liquidity—or money without returns—held by Islamic banks was on average 40% higher than that of traditional banks. The Islamic Financial Services Board found that the daily volume of interbank transactions between Islamic financial institutions, between Islamic and traditional banks, and between Islamic financial institutions and central banks is very low compared to traditional money markets. While Muslim countries like Bahrain, Iran, Malaysia, and Sudan have started developing Islamic money markets and issuing securitized documents based on profit-sharing partnership (musharakah), profit-sharing investment (mudarabah), and leasing (ijarah), as of at least 2013, the lack of a proper and effective secondary market means these securities are much smaller in number than those in traditional capital markets.
Regarding non-PLS, or debt-based contracts, one study found that the business model of Islamic banks is changing over time and moving toward taking on more liquidity risk.
To solve the problem of money held for liquidity or lack of investment opportunities not earning a return, many Islamic financial institutions, such as the Islamic Development Bank and Faisal Islamic Bank of Egypt, openly earn interest from their excess funds, which are usually invested in safer debt-like or overseas debt instruments. Sharia experts do not forbid this practice, but instead provide the necessary religious rulings (fatwa) to comply with Sharia based on the rule of necessity (darurah). Researchers Frank Vogel and Frank Hayes write:
Islamic finance and banking scholars cite necessity to allow exceptions and relax rules. They issued fatwas allowing Islamic banks to deposit funds into interest-bearing accounts, especially abroad, because these banks have no other investments during periods of necessity. However, they usually attach conditions to such fatwas, such as requiring that illegal earnings be used for religious charitable purposes like charity, training, or research.
Lack of social responsibility
According to Islamic teachings, Islamic banks should adopt new financing policies and explore new investment channels to encourage development and improve the living standards of small-scale traders, but Taqi Usmani complains that few Islamic banks and financial institutions focus on this. Islamic scholar Mohammad Hashim Kamali regrets that Islamic banks focus on short-term financing, which mainly focuses on financing already produced goods rather than creating or increasing production capital or focusing on facilities like factories and infrastructure.
Muhammad Akram Khan also complains that in the process of merging with traditional banking, Islamic bank product development mimics traditional banking instead of building a different type of banking consistent with fair and equal income distribution and ethical investment models.
Another scholar, Mahmoud El-Gamal, also regrets that Islamic banks value form over substance and suggests rebranding Islamic finance to emphasize issues like community banking, microfinance, and socially responsible investment.
Criticisms from other unorthodox economists are even more intense.
Muhammad O. Farooq questions the basic premise of Islamic banking, arguing that it focuses on abolishing all interest at the expense of the big picture of pursuing overall economic justice, and cites the Quran's warning against the concentration of wealth:
Whatever Allah has restored to His Messenger from the people of the towns is for Allah and for the Messenger, and for the near relatives and the orphans and the needy and the wayfarer, so that it will not be a perpetual distribution among the rich from among you...
He questioned if greed and profit are bigger causes of exploitation than loan interest. He believes that in a competitive and regulated market, loan interest might not actually count as interest.
The Islamic banking and finance movement has adapted to political tyranny. It is supported by a small, wealthy class of rentiers in the Muslim world and is increasingly manipulated by global financial giants. Because of this, it is easily limited to just talking about opposing exploitation, and it might even unintentionally become a tool for exploitation itself. The real world is full of exploitation, such as child exploitation, sexual exploitation, and labor exploitation. Interest might only be a small part of global exploitation. However, supporters of Islamic economics and finance remain obsessed with interest.
He used the profit motive of the East India Company as an example. Before 1858, the company colonized and ruled India at the expense of the Muslim Mughal Empire, and its shares were equity rather than debt instruments. He found it curious that although books promoting Islamic banking and finance often claim that loan interest exploits the poor and Muslims, there is almost no empirical or focused research on exploitation or injustice within Islamic economics. For example, Farooq complained that in two important bibliographies on orthodox Islamic economics, there was not a single citation about exploitation or injustice. These were 'Muslim Economic Thought: A Survey of Contemporary Literature,' which had 700 entries under 51 subcategories across 115 pages, and 'Islamic Economics: Annotated Sources in English and Urdu' by Muhammad Akram Khan.
Timur Kuran complained that Islamic banks in Egypt and other Muslim countries follow Western banking practices and do little to help economic development or job creation. However, they do not follow the practices of Western venture capitalists, who have funded the global high-tech industry. Since the operating principles of venture capital are the same as profit and loss sharing, even though venture capital does not avoid haram (forbidden) products, using venture capital could bring huge benefits to Egypt and other poor Muslim countries seeking economic development.
Lack of uniformity in Sharia.
Most Islamic banks have their own Sharia boards to rule on bank policies. Researchers Frank Vogel and Frank Hayes believe the four schools of Sunni Islamic law (Madhhab) do not agree on Islamic banking practices. They apply Islamic teachings to business and finance in different ways. There are disagreements on specific points of religious law both between the four schools and within them. Also, Sharia boards sometimes change their minds and overturn previous decisions.
Ibrahim Warde asks if boards just rubber-stamp the banks that pay their salaries. Munawar Iqbal and Philip Molyneux say that disagreements between boards about what counts as Sharia-compliant can cause trouble, because customers might doubt if a bank is truly following the rules. If Islamic banks are not seen as truly Islamic, they will quickly lose most of their market.
Late payments and defaults.
In traditional finance, late payments or loan defaults are discouraged by interest that keeps adding up. Muhammad Akran Khan says that controlling and managing late accounts has become a thorny problem in Islamic finance. Although many suggestions have been made to fix the problem of overdue loans in Islamic banks, Ibrahim Warde says:
Islamic banks face serious issues with late payments, not to mention outright defaults, because some people use every legal and religious trick to delay. In most Islamic countries, various forms of fines and late fees have been set up, but they have been banned or found impossible to enforce. Late fees, in particular, have been treated the same as interest. Therefore, debtors know they can pay Islamic banks last because there is no cost for doing so.
Warde also complained:
Many business people who borrowed large amounts of money for a long time took advantage of the shift to Islamic finance. They paid back only the principal and wiped out the accumulated interest. Given the double-digit inflation over the years, this was usually a tiny amount.
How to deal with inflation
Inflation is also a problem for financing. Islamic banks do not copy traditional banks; they actually provide loans without interest or any other fees. Whether and how to compensate lenders for money that loses value due to inflation is a problem that "troubles" Islamic scholars. If lenders lose money by giving loans, businesses will not be able to get financing. Suggestions include indexing loans to inflation, which many scholars oppose because they think it is a form of interest and encourages inflation. Other ideas include measuring loans by commodities like gold, or doing more research to find an answer.
The influence of non-Muslims
Almost all, if not all, customers of Islamic banking and finance are Muslims. But most financial institutions that provide Islamic banking services are Western and owned by non-Muslims. Supporters of Islamic banking believe that the interest Western banks have in Islamic banking is proof of strong and growing market demand, and therefore an "achievement of the Islamic movement."
However, critics complain that these banks lack a deep commitment to the faith of Islamic banking, which means:
The Muslims hired at these institutions have almost no input into actual management. This leads the Muslim public to sometimes have well-founded doubts about how seriously these institutions follow Sharia law. A traditional Malaysian bank offering Islamic investment funds was found to have invested most of these funds in the gambling industry. The managers running these funds are not Muslim.
The interest from traditional banks does not show that Islamic banking is growing stronger. Instead, it shows how similar Islamic and traditional banks are, so the latter can enter the Islamic banking sector without making any real changes to their business. El-Gamal doubts whether the interest of large non-Muslim banks in Islamic finance comes from the profitability of Islamic financial business.
When the market hits a downturn, these banks are more likely to exit the industry. Harris Irfan believes that non-Muslim banks like Deutsche Bank lack an ideological commitment to Islamic banking, which has led and will continue to lead them to exit the industry when the market hits a downturn. In early 2011, during the bursting of the real estate bubble, Deutsche Bank did not keep a single dedicated Islamic structurer or salesperson. Islamic finance has become a luxury that banks cannot afford. Perhaps partly because of this, in February 2011, the Central Bank of Qatar ordered traditional lenders to close their Islamic operations in the country by the end of the year. The central bank insisted that it was too much for traditional banks to follow alternative capital adequacy rules for Islamic finance, and it was hard to supervise and monitor the Islamic and traditional operations of commercial banks because depositors' funds would get mixed together.
Stability/Risk
Opinions differ on whether Islamic banking is more stable and carries less risk than traditional banking.
Supporters, such as Bank Negara Malaysia Governor Zeti Akhtar Aziz, believe that Islamic financial institutions are more stable than traditional banks because they forbid speculation and, in theory, the two main types of Islamic bank accounts—current accounts and profit-sharing accounts (mudarabah)—pose less risk to the bank.
In a current account, customers do not earn any return, and there is theoretically no risk of loss because the bank does not invest the funds in the account.
In a profit-sharing investment account (mudaraba), an Islamic bank faces less risk from loan defaults because it shares this risk with the depositors. If a borrower cannot repay some or all of the money the bank lent them, the amount distributed to depositors decreases by the same amount. In a traditional bank, depositors receive fixed interest payments regardless of whether the bank's income drops due to loan defaults.
Critics complain that this stability comes at the cost of the stability of the account balances for depositors or partners—a term Islamic banks often use instead of customers or depositors—who face risks that those in traditional banks do not. a critic named Mahmoud A. El-Gamal argues:
In these institutions, investment account holders have neither the protection of creditors in an Islamic financial institution nor the protection of equity holders represented on the institution's board. This introduces many other well-documented risk factors to the institution.
On the other hand, Habib Ahmed wrote shortly after the 2009 financial crisis that the practice of Islamic finance has gradually moved closer to traditional finance, which exposes it to the same dangers of instability.
When looking at the practice of Islamic finance and its operating environment, one can find trends similar to those that led to the current crisis. Recently, stock and real estate markets in the Gulf region have also experienced speculative events. Finally, the Islamic finance industry has grown rapidly with the innovation of complex financial products that comply with Sharia law. The risks of these new Islamic financial products are complex because these tools involve multiple types of risk.
In any case, several Islamic banks have failed over the decades. In 1988, the Islamic investment company Ar-Ryan collapsed, causing thousands of small investors to lose their savings. Later, an anonymous donor from a Gulf country covered their losses. This was a heavy blow to Islamic finance at the time. In 1998, the management of Bank al Taqwa collapsed. Its annual report stated that depositors and shareholders lost more than 23% of their principal. It was later discovered that management violated bank rules by investing more than 60% of the bank's assets into a single project.
Turkey's Ihlas Finance House closed in 2001 due to liquidity problems and financial distress. Faisal Islamic Bank also ran into difficulties and closed its operations in the UK for regulatory reasons. According to The Economist magazine, the 2009 Dubai debt crisis showed that Islamic bonds could help inflate debt to unsustainable levels.
Economic recession
According to a 2010 survey by the International Monetary Fund, Islamic banks showed stronger resilience on average than conventional banks during the 2007 to 2008 financial crisis, but they faced greater losses when the crisis hit the real economy.
At the start of the 2007-2009 Great Recession, Islamic banks were unscathed. One supporter of Islamic banking wrote that the collapse of major Wall Street institutions, especially Lehman Brothers, should encourage economists worldwide to look at Islamic banking and finance as an alternative model. However, the impact of the financial recession gradually shifted to the real sector, affecting the Islamic banking industry. According to Ibrahim Warde, this shows that Islamic finance is not a panacea, and a faith-based system is not automatically immune to the unpredictability of the financial system.
Concentrated ownership
Munawar Iqbal and Philip Molyneux believe that concentrated ownership is another danger to the stability of the Islamic banking and finance industry. They wrote:
Three or four families own a large portion of the industry's shares. If anything happens to these families, or if the next generation of these families changes their priorities, this concentration of ownership could lead to serious financial instability and potentially cause the industry to collapse. Similarly, the experience of national-level trials is mostly based on the initiatives of non-elected rulers.
Macroeconomic risks
Harris Irafan warns that the macroeconomic risks of Islamic banking create a multi-billion dollar ticking time bomb of unhedged currency and interest rates. The difficulty, complexity, and cost of hedging these currencies and interest rates in a proper Islamic way are so high that as of 2015, the Islamic Development Bank was losing cash rapidly, as if it were funding a war. Without relying on conventional markets, it simply cannot consistently exchange dollars for euros or vice versa. Regional Islamic banks in the Middle East and Malaysia do not have trained professionals to understand and negotiate Sharia-compliant treasury swaps, nor are they willing to hire consultants with experience in this area.
High costs and low efficiency
Mohamed El-Gamal believes that because Islamic financial products mimic traditional ones but operate under Sharia rules, they require extra fees for jurists and lawyers, plus costs for multiple sales, special purpose vehicles, and ownership documentation. There are also costs linked to the special structures Islamic banks use for late payment penalties. Because of this, their financing costs are often higher than traditional products, while account returns are often lower.
El-Gamal also argues that another reason for the inefficiency and higher costs of Islamic banking, and why it always lags behind new financial products in the traditional industry, is the reliance on classical nominal contracts like cost-plus financing (murabaha) and leasing (ijara). These contracts follow classical texts written during a time when financial markets were very limited. They cannot untangle various risks, whereas modern financial markets and institutions like money markets, capital markets, and options markets are designed specifically to do that. On the other hand, improving the efficiency of these contracts or products alienates pious customers who believe they should follow classical forms.
In a major part of the financial market—home buying—Islamic finance could not compete with traditional finance in countries like the UK, Canada, and the US as of 2002 in the UK and 2009 in North America. According to Humayon Dar, the monthly payments for Sharia-compliant leasing contracts used by the Islamic investment banking division of Ahli United Bank in the UK were much higher than equivalent traditional mortgages. According to Hans Visser, the cost of Islamic home financing in Canada was 100 to 300 basis points higher than traditional financing, and 40 to 100 basis points higher in the United States. Visser believes Islamic loan financing costs more because Islamic loans have higher risk weights compared to traditional mortgages under international standards for minimum bank capital requirements set by Basel I and Basel II. In some cases, the Islamic profit rate is the same as a traditional mortgage rate, but the closing costs are several hundred dollars higher.
Reports by M. Kabir Hassan in 2005 and 2006 show that Islamic banks dominated by cost-plus financing (murabaha) are not very efficient. The banks studied had an average cost efficiency of 74% and an average profit efficiency of 84%. Although Islamic banks are less efficient at controlling costs, they are generally more efficient at generating profits. A later report on efficiency indicators like cost, allocation, technology, pure technology, and scale noted that, on average, the efficiency of the Islamic banking industry is relatively low compared to traditional banks in other parts of the world.
Other studies found that the efficiency of Islamic banks is, on average, slightly lower than traditional banks in non-Muslim majority regions, measured by bank revenue minus the profits paid to depositors.
This includes studies of Malaysian banks from 1997 to 2003 and Turkish Islamic banks between 1999 and 2001.
In contrast, a multi-country study covering a similar period from 1999 to 2005 found no significant difference in overall efficiency, according to a 2008 study that measured the cost, revenue, and profit efficiency of 43 Islamic banks and 37 traditional banks across 21 countries.
Common explanations for the flaws in the Islamic banking industry from the Islamic finance movement, as noted by M. O. Farooq, are:
Industry problems and challenges are part of a learning curve that will be solved over time.
Unless the industry operates within an Islamic society and environment, it will be hindered by non-Islamic influences and cannot operate according to its true nature.
While the truth of the second explanation cannot be verified until a complete Islamic society is established, Feisal Khan points out regarding the first defense that the industry has shown little evidence of progress since that argument was first made in 1993. That year, critic Timur Kuran highlighted problems in the industry, noting that Islamic banks are basically similar to traditional banks in practice, marginalizing equity-based, risk-sharing models while embracing short-term products and debt-like instruments, while supporter Ausaf Ahmad defended the industry by saying it was in the early stages of transitioning from traditional banking.
Seventeen years later, Islamic finance supporter Ibrahim Warde lamented that murabaha and similar sales products have not disappeared but have grown significantly, and today they make up the bulk of most Islamic banking business.
Most critics of Islamic banking call for more orthodoxy, doubling down on efforts to strictly enforce Sharia law. Some people, like M. O. Farooq and M. A. Khan, blame the industry's problems on treating loan interest as forbidden interest (riba) and the impracticality of trying to enforce that ban.
Finally, I am borrowing an article written by Talha Ahmed Iftikhar on his blog:
Not long ago, my friend wanted to buy furniture from a company that advertised that customers could use interest-free loans for up to 6 months provided by several banks to purchase their products. He decided to get this loan from an Islamic bank to stay compliant with Sharia, but he was shocked when the bank told him his invoice would increase by 30% because it included a profit margin. Then, the deal would be converted into a credit sale contract, and the amount would be paid back in installments over 6 months.
I asked the CEO how an Islamic bank could charge a 30% profit to someone who did not have the money to pay the full amount at once. Isn't this the strong exploiting the weak? Is this the same as the riba or usury that is condemned? His answer left me very confused: "We charge the same fees as the market." For those in need, we have a charity department. They call it a transaction. I left the meeting right away.
Murabaha is not a form of trade, but a banking product designed to trick Muslims into interest-based debt traps. Using it as an Islamic financing model must stop immediately, or at the very least, banks should be banned from using Islam to sell this product. Usury, or riba, is at the heart of an unfair economic system where the strong get stronger at the expense of the weak. Top officials at Islamic banks admit that this product hides the same interest rates used by other banks, which clearly shows these products will never help achieve social justice.
Muslim Knowledge Guide China: Loan Interest, Riba and Christian-Islamic Finance Ethics
Articles • yusuf908 posted the article • 0 comments • 10 views • 4 hours ago
Summary: This Muslim knowledge guide compares Christian and Islamic debates over charging interest on loans, covering biblical arguments, church history, loan types, riba, bank interest, Muslim scholar opinions, and the wider question of finance ethics in daily life.
This article has two parts. The first part covers how Christian scholars view interest, and the second part covers how Muslim scholars view it. You will find that both religions have similar diverse conclusions on interest, but their followers took different paths. This depends on which clergy members have more influence.
Original Title
Is It Wrong to Charge Interest on a Loan?
Author: Kevin DeYoung, Professor of Systematic Theology at Reformed Theological Seminary and Senior Pastor at Christ Covenant Church.
Last week, I posted some content from the Westminster Larger Catechism related to economics. In a place where the doctrine forbids usury, I added a note about loan-sharks. This drew sharp criticism from commentators:
Kevin, you know very well that usury in the Bible and 17th-century church doctrine was not defined as loan-sharks. It was defined as charging any interest rate greater than zero. You are free to think the Bible is outdated and wrong on this point. But please have the courage to stand up and say you think the Bible is wrong. Do not redefine words in the Bible to mean something they do not, just so you can claim you believe in the Bible when you actually do not accept it.
These words are powerful. This gentleman claims that the Westminster clergy opposed charging any form of interest under any circumstances, and he insists that I am wrong and the Bible is wrong.
I removed the notes because I could see that the points I tried to make in parentheses should not be taken as the correct interpretation. My views need a more substantial explanation.
What is at stake here?
Before we discuss the accusation that interest is not biblical, let us first understand everything at stake in this discussion. We might think that making money from interest is a unique profession for bankers, Wall Street people, and other seemingly super-rich bad guys.
But charging interest on loans is what your credit card company does.
It is what the big stores do when you buy a refrigerator.
It is what car companies do when they let you drive a new car off the lot with almost no down payment.
It is what your mortgage company does to make home ownership possible. It is how the government issues student loans, and essentially, it is what you do when you deposit money into a bank or buy government bonds.
You let others use your money because they promise to keep it safe and return it to you with interest.
None of this proves that charging interest is allowed by religious law, but it does mean that people who use the Bible to oppose interest should be ready to oppose and give up almost every part of the modern economy.
A brief history of usury
For most of church history, Christians have opposed charging interest on most loans. This makes sense when you consider the Bible's prohibitions.
According to Leviticus (25:37), you must not lend your money to your brother. Exodus (22:25) states that if you lend money to any poor person among you, you cannot act like a moneylender toward him, nor can you charge him interest.
Deuteronomy (23:20) says the same thing about loans within the Israelite community, but it includes an important warning: you may charge interest to a foreigner. We can understand why charging interest was often opposed.
But it would be wrong to think the church always opposed interest on every type of loan. Usury has always been considered a sin, but not all interest-bearing loans were seen as usury. There is a long history of defining usury as loans for survival rather than loans for capital. Loans in the Old Testament were for those who were destitute and poor, which is the clear context for the passages mentioned above in Exodus and Leviticus. When someone in a covenant community hits rock bottom, the best approach is to give them what they need, followed by a loan. One thing you cannot do is give them an interest-bearing loan. This situation calls for charity, as it is not an opportunity to make money at the expense of someone else's misfortune.
However, loans made as business or investment risks have historically been viewed as a different type of loan. In his book Banking, Justice, and the Common Good, Samuel Gregg examines the history of usury and the church: 'It seems no one seriously objected to people lending money to others.' There is even quite a bit of evidence showing that clergy provided a form of 'banking service' to their peers. To be sure, throughout most of Christendom, the church forbade Christians from charging interest, which is why banking became a business dominated by Jewish people. They were permitted to charge interest on loans (Deuteronomy 23:20). Consequently, Jewish people were often accused of being 'moneylenders,' and their unique role in the financial industry became a contributing factor to centuries of antisemitism.
However, over time, Christians became more careful in how they defined usury. The Fifth Council of the Lateran (1512-17) defined usury as 'nothing other than gain or profit acquired from the use of a thing that is essentially barren, without labor, cost, or risk.'
This means that if a lender provides money with labor, cost, and risk involved, they can charge interest without committing the sin of usury. Similarly, Calvin also spoke about acceptable and unacceptable usury. Making money off the poor is one thing, but if we must do business with the rich, usury is allowed. He believes that besides the principal, high interest should be paid to the creditor to make up for his losses. In short, reason does not lead us to admit that all usury should be condemned without exception (Commentary on Exodus).
Similarly, Ursinus points out in his Commentary on the Heidelberg Catechism that all fair contracts, including paying rent, fair compensation for any loss, partnerships, and purchases, are exempt from being called usury. In other words, not every kind of interest is usury. Some are, and some are not. It depends on whether the loan helps the borrower or is most likely to harm them. Ursinus wrote that there are many questions about usury, and we can judge them based on the rule set by Christ: do to others what you would have them do to you.
Given this history of the Christian church, especially the Reformed churches, it is unlikely that Westminster Theological Seminary would condemn every type of interest-bearing loan. What has been condemned—and will continue to be—is predatory lending. There is no doubt that some people in the financial industry have committed sins in their lending practices, and just because we cannot say every loan is usury does not mean that nothing is usury. For example, in many poorer communities, you will find institutions that charge astronomical interest rates to provide people with cash advances. Given the risks involved, are these higher interest rates reasonable? Or is this exactly the usury that Christians have always condemned—squeezing the last penny from the poor and driving them into bankruptcy? In the book The Ascent of Money, Niall Ferguson argues that the early days of banking were made up of such usurers, which is why I used the phrase in parentheses last week.
Conclusion
For most of human history, charging interest on loans has been controversial, as Jay Richards explains:
By modern standards, almost everyone was poor, and only a very few rich people had money to lend. So, any loan would involve a rich person lending to their poor neighbors, who might be their relatives, to meet basic needs like food. People hid their extra money away, so while a person might have the right to ask for their money back, charging a poor person a fee for the temporary use of money that would otherwise just gather dust seems immoral. Charging huge interest rates that cannot be repaid only makes things worse, because it takes advantage of a person's misfortune and ignorance. Therefore, given the historical context and the belief that money should not be valued above all else, banning usury makes sense. (Money, Greed, and Allah, page 140).
So, has the church changed its view on usury? No, but its definition has become more precise. Usury is not charging interest on a loan to offset the risk of the loan and the cost of giving up other uses for the money; it is unfairly charging fees on a loan by taking advantage of someone when they are in trouble. Considering the context of Old Testament provisions, this seems like a fair distinction.
I do not believe the Bible or the Westminster Confession forbids charging any interest under any circumstances. This is not the universal position of the church. Instead, it teaches that it is wrong to charge interest based on the issuance of a loan, rather than as a basis for providing fair compensation based on factors related to the loan. Bad banks, bad lenders, and bad loans still exist, but neither the Bible nor church tradition requires us to think that banks, lenders, and loans are bad simply because they are banks, lenders, and loans.
The following are the views of Muslim scholars, taken from the book Islamic Finance and Banking System:
Saleh argues that interest-related activities occurred while the Prophet was still in Mecca, at a time when there were very few Jews there. most Jews in Medina at that time were engaged in agriculture rather than commerce, and those who engaged in interest-based transactions were among the Emigrants (Muhajirun) and the Helpers (Ansar). O you who believe! Do not consume interest, doubled and multiplied, but fear Allah that you may succeed. (3:130) The prohibition above was revealed during the Battle of Uhud. The funds for the Battle of Uhud were raised through interest. Abdullah ibn Salam said that interest practices were widespread in Medina, and this happened after the Prophet passed away.
Shaltut (1974) argued that the Quran only forbids excessive interest. To him, it is the 'doubled and multiplied interest' that Allah condemns. The term for interest (riba) that existed before the founding of Islam did not mean turning 100 into 200, but referred to the different ages of camels.
Syeikh Muhammad Abduh was the Mufti of Egypt. In the December 1903 issue of Al-Manar magazine, he published a statement: 'Prescribed usury is not allowed under any circumstances. However, the post office does not view the funds it collects from people as loans for profit. Under the principle of safekeeping, these funds can be used.' (Homoud, 1985, p.122)
Jawish (1908) suggested that the interest mentioned in the Quran refers to interest on delayed payments that has multiplied, not interest on loans.
Redha (1929) believed that a person could borrow 100 dollars and sign a check for 120 dollars, and this practice is absolutely not interest. Interest arising from deferred payment only occurs when the due date of a debt is extended.
Maruf Dawalibi believed that reasonable interest rates should be allowed for production loans. Scholar Syeikh Abdul Jalil Isa also supported this view. At the 1951 International Congress of Comparative Law in Paris, Dawalibi said: 'The forbidden usury refers to usury on consumer loans, not production loans. Usurers exploit the needs of the poor in the former and make them poorer by imposing excessive usury on them.' Now that economic systems are established and many companies have been formed, most loans are issued for production rather than consumption. As civilization develops, it is necessary to consider how these legal provisions should be improved. (Homoud 1985 p.120)
Syeikh Tantawi published a fatwa in the newspaper Al-Ahram stating that interest from investment certificates issued by the National Bank of Egypt (Al-Ahli Bank) is not illegal.
Syeikh Tantawi issued two more legal rulings in November 1989 and 1991, declaring that bank interest is permissible under Islamic law. (Al-Zuhayli, 2003)
In a 2004 study on Indonesian views toward interest, Antonio surveyed 45 influential scholars. Among them, 24 believed that interest paid or charged by banks is not illegal. They argued that interest is only forbidden if it harms the recipient, and only excessive interest should be called usury. Scholars who supported the legality of interest included Ibrahim Hosen, former Indonesian President Abdurrahman Wahid, and Hasan Basri.
These are the views of Muslim scholars who support the legality of interest. In contrast, opposition to interest is represented by Al-Azhar University. At its second annual conference in 1965, the university resolved that any form of interest is illegal. Given the poor state of Egyptian society in modern times and my own observations while visiting Al-Azhar, the Egyptian people have not gained a better life because of the university's presence. In fact, their lives have become harder. Therefore, any statement issued by Al-Azhar holds no authority for me and is for reference only.
We often say the root of the modern Islamic world's backwardness is that we do not follow the teachings of the Quran, but it is worth thinking deeply about exactly where we went wrong. Banks play a decisive role in the development of modern civilization, and where there are banks, there is interest. You cannot imagine someone living in society today without using a commercial bank. Even Islamic banks, which claim not to charge interest on loans, collect fees from borrowers under other names. Otherwise, why would a bank lend you money for free? Even those internet preachers who talk big about how one can live in this world without touching interest still need to use commercial bank accounts to receive donations from their followers.
I found some inspiration while looking into Christian views on lotteries and gambling. Christianity clearly opposes gambling, but they have a different explanation for lotteries, which work on similar principles. The Nanjing Union Theological Seminary believes that lotteries with a public welfare nature are acceptable, while gambling-like lotteries such as the Mark Six (liuhecai) should not be bought. It depends on the motivation and the consequences. However, some Islamic scholars take a one-size-fits-all approach to the same issue. They not only forbid any lottery behavior similar to gambling but even ban games like chess because they suspect gambling. This makes me worry about our future.
Although I do not believe Islam restricts the development of civilization, we must admit that some outdated rulings keep some people in a backward position. On the surface, some rulings seem like minor details, but in reality, they deprive people of the ability to think. If you do not allow people to try and fail, you cannot have innovation.
Finally, I have a question I would like to sincerely ask the scholars: Have you ever thought about whether the zakat, where Muslims give one-fortieth (2.5%) of their surplus wealth every year, counts as interest demanded by Allah from the believers? view all
Summary: This Muslim knowledge guide compares Christian and Islamic debates over charging interest on loans, covering biblical arguments, church history, loan types, riba, bank interest, Muslim scholar opinions, and the wider question of finance ethics in daily life.
This article has two parts. The first part covers how Christian scholars view interest, and the second part covers how Muslim scholars view it. You will find that both religions have similar diverse conclusions on interest, but their followers took different paths. This depends on which clergy members have more influence.
Original Title
Is It Wrong to Charge Interest on a Loan?
Author: Kevin DeYoung, Professor of Systematic Theology at Reformed Theological Seminary and Senior Pastor at Christ Covenant Church.
Last week, I posted some content from the Westminster Larger Catechism related to economics. In a place where the doctrine forbids usury, I added a note about loan-sharks. This drew sharp criticism from commentators:
Kevin, you know very well that usury in the Bible and 17th-century church doctrine was not defined as loan-sharks. It was defined as charging any interest rate greater than zero. You are free to think the Bible is outdated and wrong on this point. But please have the courage to stand up and say you think the Bible is wrong. Do not redefine words in the Bible to mean something they do not, just so you can claim you believe in the Bible when you actually do not accept it.
These words are powerful. This gentleman claims that the Westminster clergy opposed charging any form of interest under any circumstances, and he insists that I am wrong and the Bible is wrong.
I removed the notes because I could see that the points I tried to make in parentheses should not be taken as the correct interpretation. My views need a more substantial explanation.
What is at stake here?
Before we discuss the accusation that interest is not biblical, let us first understand everything at stake in this discussion. We might think that making money from interest is a unique profession for bankers, Wall Street people, and other seemingly super-rich bad guys.
But charging interest on loans is what your credit card company does.
It is what the big stores do when you buy a refrigerator.
It is what car companies do when they let you drive a new car off the lot with almost no down payment.
It is what your mortgage company does to make home ownership possible. It is how the government issues student loans, and essentially, it is what you do when you deposit money into a bank or buy government bonds.
You let others use your money because they promise to keep it safe and return it to you with interest.
None of this proves that charging interest is allowed by religious law, but it does mean that people who use the Bible to oppose interest should be ready to oppose and give up almost every part of the modern economy.
A brief history of usury
For most of church history, Christians have opposed charging interest on most loans. This makes sense when you consider the Bible's prohibitions.
According to Leviticus (25:37), you must not lend your money to your brother. Exodus (22:25) states that if you lend money to any poor person among you, you cannot act like a moneylender toward him, nor can you charge him interest.
Deuteronomy (23:20) says the same thing about loans within the Israelite community, but it includes an important warning: you may charge interest to a foreigner. We can understand why charging interest was often opposed.
But it would be wrong to think the church always opposed interest on every type of loan. Usury has always been considered a sin, but not all interest-bearing loans were seen as usury. There is a long history of defining usury as loans for survival rather than loans for capital. Loans in the Old Testament were for those who were destitute and poor, which is the clear context for the passages mentioned above in Exodus and Leviticus. When someone in a covenant community hits rock bottom, the best approach is to give them what they need, followed by a loan. One thing you cannot do is give them an interest-bearing loan. This situation calls for charity, as it is not an opportunity to make money at the expense of someone else's misfortune.
However, loans made as business or investment risks have historically been viewed as a different type of loan. In his book Banking, Justice, and the Common Good, Samuel Gregg examines the history of usury and the church: 'It seems no one seriously objected to people lending money to others.' There is even quite a bit of evidence showing that clergy provided a form of 'banking service' to their peers. To be sure, throughout most of Christendom, the church forbade Christians from charging interest, which is why banking became a business dominated by Jewish people. They were permitted to charge interest on loans (Deuteronomy 23:20). Consequently, Jewish people were often accused of being 'moneylenders,' and their unique role in the financial industry became a contributing factor to centuries of antisemitism.
However, over time, Christians became more careful in how they defined usury. The Fifth Council of the Lateran (1512-17) defined usury as 'nothing other than gain or profit acquired from the use of a thing that is essentially barren, without labor, cost, or risk.'
This means that if a lender provides money with labor, cost, and risk involved, they can charge interest without committing the sin of usury. Similarly, Calvin also spoke about acceptable and unacceptable usury. Making money off the poor is one thing, but if we must do business with the rich, usury is allowed. He believes that besides the principal, high interest should be paid to the creditor to make up for his losses. In short, reason does not lead us to admit that all usury should be condemned without exception (Commentary on Exodus).
Similarly, Ursinus points out in his Commentary on the Heidelberg Catechism that all fair contracts, including paying rent, fair compensation for any loss, partnerships, and purchases, are exempt from being called usury. In other words, not every kind of interest is usury. Some are, and some are not. It depends on whether the loan helps the borrower or is most likely to harm them. Ursinus wrote that there are many questions about usury, and we can judge them based on the rule set by Christ: do to others what you would have them do to you.
Given this history of the Christian church, especially the Reformed churches, it is unlikely that Westminster Theological Seminary would condemn every type of interest-bearing loan. What has been condemned—and will continue to be—is predatory lending. There is no doubt that some people in the financial industry have committed sins in their lending practices, and just because we cannot say every loan is usury does not mean that nothing is usury. For example, in many poorer communities, you will find institutions that charge astronomical interest rates to provide people with cash advances. Given the risks involved, are these higher interest rates reasonable? Or is this exactly the usury that Christians have always condemned—squeezing the last penny from the poor and driving them into bankruptcy? In the book The Ascent of Money, Niall Ferguson argues that the early days of banking were made up of such usurers, which is why I used the phrase in parentheses last week.
Conclusion
For most of human history, charging interest on loans has been controversial, as Jay Richards explains:
By modern standards, almost everyone was poor, and only a very few rich people had money to lend. So, any loan would involve a rich person lending to their poor neighbors, who might be their relatives, to meet basic needs like food. People hid their extra money away, so while a person might have the right to ask for their money back, charging a poor person a fee for the temporary use of money that would otherwise just gather dust seems immoral. Charging huge interest rates that cannot be repaid only makes things worse, because it takes advantage of a person's misfortune and ignorance. Therefore, given the historical context and the belief that money should not be valued above all else, banning usury makes sense. (Money, Greed, and Allah, page 140).
So, has the church changed its view on usury? No, but its definition has become more precise. Usury is not charging interest on a loan to offset the risk of the loan and the cost of giving up other uses for the money; it is unfairly charging fees on a loan by taking advantage of someone when they are in trouble. Considering the context of Old Testament provisions, this seems like a fair distinction.
I do not believe the Bible or the Westminster Confession forbids charging any interest under any circumstances. This is not the universal position of the church. Instead, it teaches that it is wrong to charge interest based on the issuance of a loan, rather than as a basis for providing fair compensation based on factors related to the loan. Bad banks, bad lenders, and bad loans still exist, but neither the Bible nor church tradition requires us to think that banks, lenders, and loans are bad simply because they are banks, lenders, and loans.
The following are the views of Muslim scholars, taken from the book Islamic Finance and Banking System:
Saleh argues that interest-related activities occurred while the Prophet was still in Mecca, at a time when there were very few Jews there. most Jews in Medina at that time were engaged in agriculture rather than commerce, and those who engaged in interest-based transactions were among the Emigrants (Muhajirun) and the Helpers (Ansar). O you who believe! Do not consume interest, doubled and multiplied, but fear Allah that you may succeed. (3:130) The prohibition above was revealed during the Battle of Uhud. The funds for the Battle of Uhud were raised through interest. Abdullah ibn Salam said that interest practices were widespread in Medina, and this happened after the Prophet passed away.
Shaltut (1974) argued that the Quran only forbids excessive interest. To him, it is the 'doubled and multiplied interest' that Allah condemns. The term for interest (riba) that existed before the founding of Islam did not mean turning 100 into 200, but referred to the different ages of camels.
Syeikh Muhammad Abduh was the Mufti of Egypt. In the December 1903 issue of Al-Manar magazine, he published a statement: 'Prescribed usury is not allowed under any circumstances. However, the post office does not view the funds it collects from people as loans for profit. Under the principle of safekeeping, these funds can be used.' (Homoud, 1985, p.122)
Jawish (1908) suggested that the interest mentioned in the Quran refers to interest on delayed payments that has multiplied, not interest on loans.
Redha (1929) believed that a person could borrow 100 dollars and sign a check for 120 dollars, and this practice is absolutely not interest. Interest arising from deferred payment only occurs when the due date of a debt is extended.
Maruf Dawalibi believed that reasonable interest rates should be allowed for production loans. Scholar Syeikh Abdul Jalil Isa also supported this view. At the 1951 International Congress of Comparative Law in Paris, Dawalibi said: 'The forbidden usury refers to usury on consumer loans, not production loans. Usurers exploit the needs of the poor in the former and make them poorer by imposing excessive usury on them.' Now that economic systems are established and many companies have been formed, most loans are issued for production rather than consumption. As civilization develops, it is necessary to consider how these legal provisions should be improved. (Homoud 1985 p.120)
Syeikh Tantawi published a fatwa in the newspaper Al-Ahram stating that interest from investment certificates issued by the National Bank of Egypt (Al-Ahli Bank) is not illegal.
Syeikh Tantawi issued two more legal rulings in November 1989 and 1991, declaring that bank interest is permissible under Islamic law. (Al-Zuhayli, 2003)
In a 2004 study on Indonesian views toward interest, Antonio surveyed 45 influential scholars. Among them, 24 believed that interest paid or charged by banks is not illegal. They argued that interest is only forbidden if it harms the recipient, and only excessive interest should be called usury. Scholars who supported the legality of interest included Ibrahim Hosen, former Indonesian President Abdurrahman Wahid, and Hasan Basri.
These are the views of Muslim scholars who support the legality of interest. In contrast, opposition to interest is represented by Al-Azhar University. At its second annual conference in 1965, the university resolved that any form of interest is illegal. Given the poor state of Egyptian society in modern times and my own observations while visiting Al-Azhar, the Egyptian people have not gained a better life because of the university's presence. In fact, their lives have become harder. Therefore, any statement issued by Al-Azhar holds no authority for me and is for reference only.
We often say the root of the modern Islamic world's backwardness is that we do not follow the teachings of the Quran, but it is worth thinking deeply about exactly where we went wrong. Banks play a decisive role in the development of modern civilization, and where there are banks, there is interest. You cannot imagine someone living in society today without using a commercial bank. Even Islamic banks, which claim not to charge interest on loans, collect fees from borrowers under other names. Otherwise, why would a bank lend you money for free? Even those internet preachers who talk big about how one can live in this world without touching interest still need to use commercial bank accounts to receive donations from their followers.
I found some inspiration while looking into Christian views on lotteries and gambling. Christianity clearly opposes gambling, but they have a different explanation for lotteries, which work on similar principles. The Nanjing Union Theological Seminary believes that lotteries with a public welfare nature are acceptable, while gambling-like lotteries such as the Mark Six (liuhecai) should not be bought. It depends on the motivation and the consequences. However, some Islamic scholars take a one-size-fits-all approach to the same issue. They not only forbid any lottery behavior similar to gambling but even ban games like chess because they suspect gambling. This makes me worry about our future.
Although I do not believe Islam restricts the development of civilization, we must admit that some outdated rulings keep some people in a backward position. On the surface, some rulings seem like minor details, but in reality, they deprive people of the ability to think. If you do not allow people to try and fail, you cannot have innovation.
Finally, I have a question I would like to sincerely ask the scholars: Have you ever thought about whether the zakat, where Muslims give one-fortieth (2.5%) of their surplus wealth every year, counts as interest demanded by Allah from the believers?
Muslim Knowledge Guide China: Is Car Insurance or a Mortgage Halal? Riba and Islamic Insurance Ethics
Articles • yusuf908 posted the article • 0 comments • 8 views • 18 hours ago
Summary: This Islamic finance article translates Ibrahim Khan’s discussion on car insurance and mortgage loans, explaining riba, necessity, transaction responsibility, and Sharia reasoning in plain English.
This is my translation of the third article in Ibrahim Khan's series on the Islamic law of insurance. The first article discussed the basic legal principles of insurance: Ibrahim Khan: Is Insurance Halal? The second article specifically discussed the unique nature of life insurance within insurance categories: Ibrahim Khan: Is Life Insurance Halal? Although this third article is titled Car Insurance, the reasoning method explained in the text applies to all financial fields. It is not limited to car insurance or home mortgage loans; it applies to any financial area involving interest or other unlawful gains.
Before starting the main text, I will briefly summarize the main point in plain language: when we trade with others, as long as the transaction itself is legal, it does not matter to us if the person we are trading with turns around and does something illegal. It is just like how we cannot refuse to let non-Muslims eat at a halal restaurant.
Is Car Insurance Equivalent to a Riba-Based Mortgage?
Author: Ibrahim Khan
Translated by Yahya
About the author: Ibrahim Khan holds a bachelor's degree in Philosophy, Politics, and Economics from the University of Oxford and a master's degree in Islamic Finance from the Al Salam Institute. He previously worked as a private equity/venture capital lawyer in New York City and is a co-founder of Islamic Finance Guru.
In a seminar I recently attended with Shaykh Akram Nadwi, the discussion turned to the Islamic stance on conventional mortgage loans. Shaykh Akram argued that he now agrees with Shaykh al-Qaradawi's famous fatwa on mortgages, which states that if long-term renting is not feasible for a family, they are permitted to apply for a conventional mortgage.
In this blog post, I do not want to discuss the specific situations where long-term renting is not possible, as I have discussed that before. I want to discuss some interesting arguments used by Shaykh Akram Nadwi that inspired me. This first set of arguments is:
1. Someone cannot rent long-term and needs to buy a house now;
2. Islamic mortgages are just a form of conventional mortgages;
3. To buy a house, someone must apply for a mortgage;
4. Therefore, someone can obtain a conventional mortgage that includes interest because it is necessary—just as car insurance is permitted because it is also necessary.
I want to focus on point 4 for further analysis.
Shaykh Akram Nadwi points out that the nature of a home mortgage is not consistent with car insurance. Buying car insurance is a necessary condition for driving a car, but a home mortgage is not a necessary condition for buying a house, even though buying a house is sometimes considered a necessity.
Some very important points
Because there are many positions on these issues, this argument is an important deciding factor for which camp you join. The second set of arguments:
1. Some say that conventional mortgages and car insurance are allowed based on life needs (for example, Sh. Akram and Sh. Suhaib Hasan).
2. Some say traditional mortgages are haram, but car insurance is allowed due to necessity (most Muslim scholars, such as the AlQalam Shariah Panel and Sh. Wahba
Zuhayli).
3. Some say both traditional mortgages and car insurance are haram (I do not know who).
4. Some say traditional mortgages are halal, but car insurance is haram (I do not know who).
So, which of these two sets of views is actually correct?
The argument for allowing car insurance is that people need cars to get around in the UK, since we cannot be expected to use public transport and taxis all the time. Therefore, we need to buy insurance for legal reasons, and under Islamic law, we are also permitted to buy car insurance.
Sheikh Akram Nadwi and some others argue that no one forces us to buy car insurance since we could walk or take public transport, so it is not strictly necessary. Likewise, we do not have to buy a house because we can just rent, so that is not strictly required either. The problem is that living without a car or a house is very difficult today, so is it appropriate for us to live that way? The second group believes car insurance is halal while mortgages are haram, but Sheikh Akram Nadwi and some scholars believe both are halal.
Let us discuss this further.
The second group might argue that because a rented property is exactly the same as a property bought with a mortgage, you would not face any major hardship if you kept renting. Public transport or taxis are very different from owning your own car, so it is difficult to get around if you have to rely on them all the time.
I think this is a good point, especially outside city centers like London. Once we talk about London, the benefits of public transport or taxis are not as clear because of the constant availability of taxis, Uber, and tube stations, plus the usual hassles of owning a car like parking and traffic jams. Even in a place like London, people still end up using cars for good reasons. They are convenient, and a woman traveling to her mother's house at night is much safer in her own car than in a taxi. These two options are still very different.
A second point the second group could make is that every form of transport in the UK must legally have some level of insurance, whether it is public transport or a taxi. Since you cannot avoid supporting insurance indirectly anyway, you might as well buy insurance for your own car. However, not every house in the UK has a mortgage. The one you happen to rent might have one, but that is not always the case. So, renting is not necessarily tied to a standard mortgage, while any type of public transport, taxi, or your own car involves insurance. This is another difference between mortgages and car insurance, and it explains why some people think mortgages are not halal, while car insurance is.
To me, this is not a new idea. In Islamic law, the business practices of a landlord, taxi driver, bus company, or subway operator generally do not concern you. You are just doing business with them, just like you would with shops like Tesco or Lidl. No one can suddenly claim that shopping at these places is haram just because the owners do something that is not permitted in Islam. In both cases, your transaction is completely halal, whether you are renting a property or paying for a transport service. I feel the same logic applies to car insurance and mortgages, as there is no fundamental difference between them.
Conclusion
The first group of scholars makes a solid point that conventional mortgages and car insurance should be allowed due to necessity in some cases, since they are similar. However, for the reasons discussed above, I think their argument is wrong, so the second group is more convincing to me.
It is important to remember that the first group of scholars was pushed toward allowing conventional mortgages because they believe Islamic mortgages are the same as or even worse than traditional ones. Therefore, to them, there is no real Islamic mortgage alternative other than leasing. However, many scholars in the second group are happy to declare that traditional mortgages are haram because there are other viable alternatives besides leasing, such as Islamic mortgages, which we will discuss in another article.
Of course, there is another school of thought: those who believe all insurance is fine, not because it is necessary, but because of the nature of insurance itself, but we will discuss that another time. view all
Summary: This Islamic finance article translates Ibrahim Khan’s discussion on car insurance and mortgage loans, explaining riba, necessity, transaction responsibility, and Sharia reasoning in plain English.
This is my translation of the third article in Ibrahim Khan's series on the Islamic law of insurance. The first article discussed the basic legal principles of insurance: Ibrahim Khan: Is Insurance Halal? The second article specifically discussed the unique nature of life insurance within insurance categories: Ibrahim Khan: Is Life Insurance Halal? Although this third article is titled Car Insurance, the reasoning method explained in the text applies to all financial fields. It is not limited to car insurance or home mortgage loans; it applies to any financial area involving interest or other unlawful gains.
Before starting the main text, I will briefly summarize the main point in plain language: when we trade with others, as long as the transaction itself is legal, it does not matter to us if the person we are trading with turns around and does something illegal. It is just like how we cannot refuse to let non-Muslims eat at a halal restaurant.
Is Car Insurance Equivalent to a Riba-Based Mortgage?
Author: Ibrahim Khan
Translated by Yahya
About the author: Ibrahim Khan holds a bachelor's degree in Philosophy, Politics, and Economics from the University of Oxford and a master's degree in Islamic Finance from the Al Salam Institute. He previously worked as a private equity/venture capital lawyer in New York City and is a co-founder of Islamic Finance Guru.
In a seminar I recently attended with Shaykh Akram Nadwi, the discussion turned to the Islamic stance on conventional mortgage loans. Shaykh Akram argued that he now agrees with Shaykh al-Qaradawi's famous fatwa on mortgages, which states that if long-term renting is not feasible for a family, they are permitted to apply for a conventional mortgage.
In this blog post, I do not want to discuss the specific situations where long-term renting is not possible, as I have discussed that before. I want to discuss some interesting arguments used by Shaykh Akram Nadwi that inspired me. This first set of arguments is:
1. Someone cannot rent long-term and needs to buy a house now;
2. Islamic mortgages are just a form of conventional mortgages;
3. To buy a house, someone must apply for a mortgage;
4. Therefore, someone can obtain a conventional mortgage that includes interest because it is necessary—just as car insurance is permitted because it is also necessary.
I want to focus on point 4 for further analysis.
Shaykh Akram Nadwi points out that the nature of a home mortgage is not consistent with car insurance. Buying car insurance is a necessary condition for driving a car, but a home mortgage is not a necessary condition for buying a house, even though buying a house is sometimes considered a necessity.
Some very important points
Because there are many positions on these issues, this argument is an important deciding factor for which camp you join. The second set of arguments:
1. Some say that conventional mortgages and car insurance are allowed based on life needs (for example, Sh. Akram and Sh. Suhaib Hasan).
2. Some say traditional mortgages are haram, but car insurance is allowed due to necessity (most Muslim scholars, such as the AlQalam Shariah Panel and Sh. Wahba
Zuhayli).
3. Some say both traditional mortgages and car insurance are haram (I do not know who).
4. Some say traditional mortgages are halal, but car insurance is haram (I do not know who).
So, which of these two sets of views is actually correct?
The argument for allowing car insurance is that people need cars to get around in the UK, since we cannot be expected to use public transport and taxis all the time. Therefore, we need to buy insurance for legal reasons, and under Islamic law, we are also permitted to buy car insurance.
Sheikh Akram Nadwi and some others argue that no one forces us to buy car insurance since we could walk or take public transport, so it is not strictly necessary. Likewise, we do not have to buy a house because we can just rent, so that is not strictly required either. The problem is that living without a car or a house is very difficult today, so is it appropriate for us to live that way? The second group believes car insurance is halal while mortgages are haram, but Sheikh Akram Nadwi and some scholars believe both are halal.
Let us discuss this further.
The second group might argue that because a rented property is exactly the same as a property bought with a mortgage, you would not face any major hardship if you kept renting. Public transport or taxis are very different from owning your own car, so it is difficult to get around if you have to rely on them all the time.
I think this is a good point, especially outside city centers like London. Once we talk about London, the benefits of public transport or taxis are not as clear because of the constant availability of taxis, Uber, and tube stations, plus the usual hassles of owning a car like parking and traffic jams. Even in a place like London, people still end up using cars for good reasons. They are convenient, and a woman traveling to her mother's house at night is much safer in her own car than in a taxi. These two options are still very different.
A second point the second group could make is that every form of transport in the UK must legally have some level of insurance, whether it is public transport or a taxi. Since you cannot avoid supporting insurance indirectly anyway, you might as well buy insurance for your own car. However, not every house in the UK has a mortgage. The one you happen to rent might have one, but that is not always the case. So, renting is not necessarily tied to a standard mortgage, while any type of public transport, taxi, or your own car involves insurance. This is another difference between mortgages and car insurance, and it explains why some people think mortgages are not halal, while car insurance is.
To me, this is not a new idea. In Islamic law, the business practices of a landlord, taxi driver, bus company, or subway operator generally do not concern you. You are just doing business with them, just like you would with shops like Tesco or Lidl. No one can suddenly claim that shopping at these places is haram just because the owners do something that is not permitted in Islam. In both cases, your transaction is completely halal, whether you are renting a property or paying for a transport service. I feel the same logic applies to car insurance and mortgages, as there is no fundamental difference between them.
Conclusion
The first group of scholars makes a solid point that conventional mortgages and car insurance should be allowed due to necessity in some cases, since they are similar. However, for the reasons discussed above, I think their argument is wrong, so the second group is more convincing to me.
It is important to remember that the first group of scholars was pushed toward allowing conventional mortgages because they believe Islamic mortgages are the same as or even worse than traditional ones. Therefore, to them, there is no real Islamic mortgage alternative other than leasing. However, many scholars in the second group are happy to declare that traditional mortgages are haram because there are other viable alternatives besides leasing, such as Islamic mortgages, which we will discuss in another article.
Of course, there is another school of thought: those who believe all insurance is fine, not because it is necessary, but because of the nature of insurance itself, but we will discuss that another time.
Muslim Knowledge Guide China: Is Life Insurance Halal? Term Life, Whole Life and Takaful Explained
Articles • yusuf908 posted the article • 0 comments • 11 views • 18 hours ago
Summary: This Islamic finance article explains Ibrahim Khan’s view on whether life insurance is halal, comparing term life insurance, whole life insurance, investment elements, and takaful-style alternatives in clear English.
Not long ago, I translated a Sharia article about insurance by Ibrahim Khan published on Islamic Finance Guru (www.islamicfinanceguru.com): Ibrahim Khan: Insurance—Is it halal? This was a selection of Sharia viewpoints discussing insurance from a macro perspective. Ibrahim Khan believes that the vast majority of insurance is lawful, but one more complex category requires separate discussion: life insurance.
The form of life insurance in our country is basically the same as abroad, divided into term life insurance and whole life insurance. The design principles of these two types of life insurance are slightly different. Because whole life insurance has a savings and value-added function, it is suspected of involving interest, and interest is prohibited by Sharia. This article will analyze in depth whether life insurance complies with Sharia based on its design principles.
Life Insurance: is it haram or halal?
(Life Insurance: Is it halal?)
Author: Ibrahim Khan
Translated by Yahya
About the author: Ibrahim Khan holds a bachelor's degree in Philosophy, Politics, and Economics from the University of Oxford and a master's degree in Islamic Finance from the Al Salam Institute. He previously worked as a private equity/venture capital lawyer in New York City and is a co-founder of Islamic Finance Guru.
Main text: In my previous article, "Ibrahim Khan: Insurance—Is it halal?" I discussed some of the main arguments for why insurance is lawful from a Sharia perspective. However, at the end of that article, I promised to write a follow-up article about "life insurance"
because I noticed that life insurance is different from commonly understood insurance products. To prevent misunderstandings, I need to elaborate further.
Well, please read on.
In short, life insurance is divided into two main categories. One is life insurance used for protection, and the other is used as an investment and financial management tool. The former is undoubtedly lawful (based on all the arguments put forward in the previous article), while the latter is only allowed to be purchased if the underlying investment is lawful.
The image shows a poster for Bupa Middle East, a world-class high-end medical insurance brand.
Types of life insurance
There are many types of life insurance, but fundamentally, they all fall into one of the following two areas.
1. Term life insurance
Term life insurance is a type of protection insurance. Under the terms of a term life policy, if you die within a set period, the insurance company pays a benefit to your family. For example, if you are 25 years old and buy a policy for 10 pounds a month, it promises to pay your family 100,000 pounds if you pass away before you turn 50. Here is what happens:
a) Either you pass away before age 50 and your family gets 100,000 pounds; or,
b) You live past age 50 and the policy ends. The insurance company simply keeps the 3,000 pounds in premiums you paid up to that point, just like they keep your annual car insurance premiums.
2. Whole life insurance
Whole life insurance combines protection insurance with an investment tool. Again, imagine you buy a whole life policy at age 25 for 100 pounds a month, and you will have paid at least 35,000 pounds in premiums by age 50. If you pass away before age 50, the insurance company pays a 35,000 pound benefit to your family. But if you live longer and earn good investment returns, you could receive a payout of over 50,000 pounds by the time you are 50.
Besides thinking about how to leave an inheritance for your loved ones after you pass away, you should also consider organizing your Islamic will. People often lose up to 9,700 pounds to inheritance tax when they die without a will. More importantly, a will is vital for Muslims so that your estate is distributed according to Islamic law. If you live in the UK, be sure to check the Islamic Finance Guru (IFG) website for guidance on wills and get your Islamic will sorted in 30 minutes.
Islamic perspective: Term life insurance clearly fits with all other types of protection insurance discussed in previous articles. The uncertainty prohibited in Hadith is not the same as the uncertainty involved in modern insurance. The many positive aspects of insurance outweigh the negative ones. If we accept that Muslim insurance follows Islamic law, we must admit that traditional insurance also follows it, because there is almost no real difference between the two. However, there may be unique objections to life insurance that do not apply to other types of insurance, so let us analyze if these arguments are convincing.
One specific argument against life insurance is that it differs from other types because it aims to provide coverage for the loss of life and the livelihood of the family after a person dies.
Ibrahim said: My Lord is the One who gives life and causes death. [Quran 2:258]
He gave you life, then He will cause you to die, and then He will bring you back to life. [Quran 22:66]
Do not kill your children for fear of poverty, for I provide for them and for you. [17:31]
Umar said: I heard the Messenger of Allah (may Allah bless him and grant him peace) say: If you rely on Allah as you should, He will provide for you just as He provides for the birds. They go out hungry in the early morning and return full in the evening. [Tirmidhi Hadith]
Opponents argue that buying life insurance goes against the decree of Allah, because Allah specifically mentions that life and livelihood are things we should not worry about, as everything is in His control. But this argument is weak, and I have a clear rebuttal: Allah says He controls life and death and provides food, but He does not want us all to sit idle or avoid taking any precautions. Do not throw yourselves into destruction... [Quran 2:195]
Anas ibn Malik said: A man from the Ansar came to the Prophet, and the Prophet (may Allah bless him and grant him peace) said: Do you have nothing in your house? The man said: Yes, I only have a piece of cloth, part of which I wear and part of which I spread on the ground, and a wooden bowl for drinking water. The Prophet said: Bring them to me. The man brought these things to him, and the Prophet held them in his hand and said, 'Who will buy these?' Someone said, 'I will buy them for one coin.' The Prophet asked two or three more times, 'Who will offer more than one coin?' Someone said, 'I will buy them for two coins.' He sold them for two coins and the Prophet said, 'Use one coin to buy food for your family.' Then buy an axe and bring it to me. The man brought it to him. The Prophet fixed a handle on it with his own hands and said, 'Go gather firewood and sell it, and do not let me see you for two weeks.' The man went to gather firewood and sold it. He earned ten coins and used them to buy clothes and food. The Prophet said, 'This is better for you than begging, as begging will be a stain on your face on the Day of Resurrection.' Begging is only allowed for three types of people: those in extreme poverty, those burdened with heavy debt, and those who must pay a high price. [Sunan Abu Dawood]
Abdullah ibn Umar (may Allah be pleased with him and his father) reported that the Prophet (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him) said, 'Any Muslim who has property to bequeath should not let two nights pass without writing a will.' (Sahih al-Bukhari) Islam teaches us to take all necessary precautions to care for our families, even after we die. In fact, Islam forbids leaving more than one-third of an estate to anyone outside of the deceased's immediate family.
Arguments against this are based on the same reasoning that all other types of protective insurance are not allowed, claiming that because Allah is the 'Healer' of the earth and the 'Protector' of the believers, one should not buy medical insurance. Following this view, one should not go to the hospital or take medicine either. Another reason people oppose life insurance is that Allah controls life and death, so Islam does not allow us to trade with it. I have two direct counterarguments: (1) In life insurance, we are not buying or selling our lives, but rather reducing the risk of financial loss from death. Also, Allah says in the Quran: Allah has purchased from the believers their lives and their properties in exchange for Paradise. [Quran 9:111]
Clearly, we do have a certain level of ownership over our lives. To that extent, we can use our lives and bodies in ways we choose.
If you think I missed any major objections to life insurance, I would love to hear your further arguments (leave a comment below the article).
Islamic perspective: Whole life insurance is fine in principle, but in practice, most people living in the West face a problem. Whole life insurance is seen as an investment in the West, and the legitimacy of an investment depends on the underlying assets.
In the Middle East, if you choose to work with a Muslim insurance company, that company is restricted by its internal policies to only invest in Sharia-compliant assets, so this is not a problem.
However, in the UK, the issue is a bit tricky because traditional insurance companies will almost certainly put a large amount of premiums into fixed-income (interest-based) products, but we may have two ways to handle this:
(1) Either get a policy where a person can decide which underlying investments the policy invests in (and then choose all Sharia-compliant assets); or (2) a person chooses an investment product where most underlying assets are Sharia-compliant, and then gives away the non-Sharia-compliant portion to charity. I am not a big fan of the latter option because whole life insurance is certainly not a necessity like a pension, so Muslims can still find other Sharia-compliant investment products as alternatives.
Conclusion
I feel the arguments above are already very clear, so I will not repeat them here. In short, if you are considering life insurance, check whether it is term insurance or whole life insurance. If it is term insurance, my view is that it is okay to buy. If it is whole life insurance, my view is that if you can choose Sharia-compliant investments, that is also fine, but in reality, this can be difficult in the West.
I think we at IFG should look deeper in the coming months at what long-term investment options follow halal rules. Insha Allah, we will soon start a series of reviews on various companies, funds, and startups that claim to be halal, and we have actually already started doing this.
Is it better to remove the non-halal parts from investment returns and keep the rest? Does this count as avoiding responsibility?
I look forward to your feedback in the comments. view all
Summary: This Islamic finance article explains Ibrahim Khan’s view on whether life insurance is halal, comparing term life insurance, whole life insurance, investment elements, and takaful-style alternatives in clear English.

Not long ago, I translated a Sharia article about insurance by Ibrahim Khan published on Islamic Finance Guru (www.islamicfinanceguru.com): Ibrahim Khan: Insurance—Is it halal? This was a selection of Sharia viewpoints discussing insurance from a macro perspective. Ibrahim Khan believes that the vast majority of insurance is lawful, but one more complex category requires separate discussion: life insurance.
The form of life insurance in our country is basically the same as abroad, divided into term life insurance and whole life insurance. The design principles of these two types of life insurance are slightly different. Because whole life insurance has a savings and value-added function, it is suspected of involving interest, and interest is prohibited by Sharia. This article will analyze in depth whether life insurance complies with Sharia based on its design principles.
Life Insurance: is it haram or halal?
(Life Insurance: Is it halal?)
Author: Ibrahim Khan
Translated by Yahya
About the author: Ibrahim Khan holds a bachelor's degree in Philosophy, Politics, and Economics from the University of Oxford and a master's degree in Islamic Finance from the Al Salam Institute. He previously worked as a private equity/venture capital lawyer in New York City and is a co-founder of Islamic Finance Guru.
Main text: In my previous article, "Ibrahim Khan: Insurance—Is it halal?" I discussed some of the main arguments for why insurance is lawful from a Sharia perspective. However, at the end of that article, I promised to write a follow-up article about "life insurance"
because I noticed that life insurance is different from commonly understood insurance products. To prevent misunderstandings, I need to elaborate further.
Well, please read on.
In short, life insurance is divided into two main categories. One is life insurance used for protection, and the other is used as an investment and financial management tool. The former is undoubtedly lawful (based on all the arguments put forward in the previous article), while the latter is only allowed to be purchased if the underlying investment is lawful.

The image shows a poster for Bupa Middle East, a world-class high-end medical insurance brand.
Types of life insurance
There are many types of life insurance, but fundamentally, they all fall into one of the following two areas.
1. Term life insurance
Term life insurance is a type of protection insurance. Under the terms of a term life policy, if you die within a set period, the insurance company pays a benefit to your family. For example, if you are 25 years old and buy a policy for 10 pounds a month, it promises to pay your family 100,000 pounds if you pass away before you turn 50. Here is what happens:
a) Either you pass away before age 50 and your family gets 100,000 pounds; or,
b) You live past age 50 and the policy ends. The insurance company simply keeps the 3,000 pounds in premiums you paid up to that point, just like they keep your annual car insurance premiums.
2. Whole life insurance
Whole life insurance combines protection insurance with an investment tool. Again, imagine you buy a whole life policy at age 25 for 100 pounds a month, and you will have paid at least 35,000 pounds in premiums by age 50. If you pass away before age 50, the insurance company pays a 35,000 pound benefit to your family. But if you live longer and earn good investment returns, you could receive a payout of over 50,000 pounds by the time you are 50.

Besides thinking about how to leave an inheritance for your loved ones after you pass away, you should also consider organizing your Islamic will. People often lose up to 9,700 pounds to inheritance tax when they die without a will. More importantly, a will is vital for Muslims so that your estate is distributed according to Islamic law. If you live in the UK, be sure to check the Islamic Finance Guru (IFG) website for guidance on wills and get your Islamic will sorted in 30 minutes.

Islamic perspective: Term life insurance clearly fits with all other types of protection insurance discussed in previous articles. The uncertainty prohibited in Hadith is not the same as the uncertainty involved in modern insurance. The many positive aspects of insurance outweigh the negative ones. If we accept that Muslim insurance follows Islamic law, we must admit that traditional insurance also follows it, because there is almost no real difference between the two. However, there may be unique objections to life insurance that do not apply to other types of insurance, so let us analyze if these arguments are convincing.
One specific argument against life insurance is that it differs from other types because it aims to provide coverage for the loss of life and the livelihood of the family after a person dies.
Ibrahim said: My Lord is the One who gives life and causes death. [Quran 2:258]
He gave you life, then He will cause you to die, and then He will bring you back to life. [Quran 22:66]
Do not kill your children for fear of poverty, for I provide for them and for you. [17:31]
Umar said: I heard the Messenger of Allah (may Allah bless him and grant him peace) say: If you rely on Allah as you should, He will provide for you just as He provides for the birds. They go out hungry in the early morning and return full in the evening. [Tirmidhi Hadith]
Opponents argue that buying life insurance goes against the decree of Allah, because Allah specifically mentions that life and livelihood are things we should not worry about, as everything is in His control. But this argument is weak, and I have a clear rebuttal: Allah says He controls life and death and provides food, but He does not want us all to sit idle or avoid taking any precautions. Do not throw yourselves into destruction... [Quran 2:195]
Anas ibn Malik said: A man from the Ansar came to the Prophet, and the Prophet (may Allah bless him and grant him peace) said: Do you have nothing in your house? The man said: Yes, I only have a piece of cloth, part of which I wear and part of which I spread on the ground, and a wooden bowl for drinking water. The Prophet said: Bring them to me. The man brought these things to him, and the Prophet held them in his hand and said, 'Who will buy these?' Someone said, 'I will buy them for one coin.' The Prophet asked two or three more times, 'Who will offer more than one coin?' Someone said, 'I will buy them for two coins.' He sold them for two coins and the Prophet said, 'Use one coin to buy food for your family.' Then buy an axe and bring it to me. The man brought it to him. The Prophet fixed a handle on it with his own hands and said, 'Go gather firewood and sell it, and do not let me see you for two weeks.' The man went to gather firewood and sold it. He earned ten coins and used them to buy clothes and food. The Prophet said, 'This is better for you than begging, as begging will be a stain on your face on the Day of Resurrection.' Begging is only allowed for three types of people: those in extreme poverty, those burdened with heavy debt, and those who must pay a high price. [Sunan Abu Dawood]
Abdullah ibn Umar (may Allah be pleased with him and his father) reported that the Prophet (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him) said, 'Any Muslim who has property to bequeath should not let two nights pass without writing a will.' (Sahih al-Bukhari) Islam teaches us to take all necessary precautions to care for our families, even after we die. In fact, Islam forbids leaving more than one-third of an estate to anyone outside of the deceased's immediate family.
Arguments against this are based on the same reasoning that all other types of protective insurance are not allowed, claiming that because Allah is the 'Healer' of the earth and the 'Protector' of the believers, one should not buy medical insurance. Following this view, one should not go to the hospital or take medicine either. Another reason people oppose life insurance is that Allah controls life and death, so Islam does not allow us to trade with it. I have two direct counterarguments: (1) In life insurance, we are not buying or selling our lives, but rather reducing the risk of financial loss from death. Also, Allah says in the Quran: Allah has purchased from the believers their lives and their properties in exchange for Paradise. [Quran 9:111]
Clearly, we do have a certain level of ownership over our lives. To that extent, we can use our lives and bodies in ways we choose.
If you think I missed any major objections to life insurance, I would love to hear your further arguments (leave a comment below the article).

Islamic perspective: Whole life insurance is fine in principle, but in practice, most people living in the West face a problem. Whole life insurance is seen as an investment in the West, and the legitimacy of an investment depends on the underlying assets.
In the Middle East, if you choose to work with a Muslim insurance company, that company is restricted by its internal policies to only invest in Sharia-compliant assets, so this is not a problem.
However, in the UK, the issue is a bit tricky because traditional insurance companies will almost certainly put a large amount of premiums into fixed-income (interest-based) products, but we may have two ways to handle this:
(1) Either get a policy where a person can decide which underlying investments the policy invests in (and then choose all Sharia-compliant assets); or (2) a person chooses an investment product where most underlying assets are Sharia-compliant, and then gives away the non-Sharia-compliant portion to charity. I am not a big fan of the latter option because whole life insurance is certainly not a necessity like a pension, so Muslims can still find other Sharia-compliant investment products as alternatives.
Conclusion
I feel the arguments above are already very clear, so I will not repeat them here. In short, if you are considering life insurance, check whether it is term insurance or whole life insurance. If it is term insurance, my view is that it is okay to buy. If it is whole life insurance, my view is that if you can choose Sharia-compliant investments, that is also fine, but in reality, this can be difficult in the West.
I think we at IFG should look deeper in the coming months at what long-term investment options follow halal rules. Insha Allah, we will soon start a series of reviews on various companies, funds, and startups that claim to be halal, and we have actually already started doing this.
Is it better to remove the non-halal parts from investment returns and keep the rest? Does this count as avoiding responsibility?
I look forward to your feedback in the comments.
Muslim Knowledge Guide China: Is Insurance Halal or Haram? Takaful, Riba and Gharar Explained
Articles • yusuf908 posted the article • 0 comments • 9 views • 19 hours ago
Summary: Muslim Knowledge Guide China: Is Insurance Halal or Haram? Takaful, Riba and Gharar Explained is presented here as a clear English Islamic finance essay for Muslim readers, starting with this scene: I translated this article today from the Islamic Finance Guru website . The original is in English. Interestingly, many of the points in the article match what I have written before, and I swear I had never read this piece until now. It keeps the original names, numbers, mosque details, food notes, photographs, and cultural context while focusing on Islamic Finance, Takaful, Halal Insurance.
I translated this article today from the Islamic Finance Guru website . The original is in English. Interestingly, many of the points in the article match what I have written before, and I swear I had never read this piece until now.
In today's world, there are countless sheikhs who are experts in scripture, and many elites who are good at finance. However, it is rare to find a scholar who understands both. This makes it hard for many jurists to make accurate judgments on new, cutting-edge issues. The author of this article, Ibrahim Khan, has both a background in financial theory and practical experience. He holds a bachelor's degree in philosophy, politics, and economics from Oxford University and worked as a private equity and venture capital lawyer in New York City. He also has a solid education in scripture, holding a degree in Islamic studies from the Al Salam Institute and a master's degree in Islamic finance. He is a rare talent in the field of contemporary Islamic finance.
Insurance: Is it Haram or Halal?
(Insurance: Is it halal?)
Author: Ibrahim Khan
Translator: Yehya
Main text:
I suspect this is the most controversial article to appear on IFG. Why do I say that? Most of my views on Islamic finance align with the mainstream, but as I have researched the insurance industry more deeply, I have found myself changing some of my ideas. Here are my preliminary views. I believe most types of insurance should be considered permissible (compliant with Sharia).
I would also add, perhaps you do not realize, that a minority of scholars, both living and deceased, believe insurance is compliant with Sharia. Although the view that insurance is forbidden is common, the view that it is permissible is not new. These scholars who believe insurance is permissible include Sheikh Mustafa Zarqa, Sheikh Ali Al-Khafeef, and Nejatullah Siddiqi. There are also some quite prominent modern scholars, but I have not held academic discussions with them. If they feel it is necessary, they can state their own views.
Basic premise
The basic premise I want everyone to remember is that Islamic Sharia does allow us to use forms of financing to help those who suffer losses due to unknown risks. Traditionally, in the Arab region, if someone in a tribe needed to pay blood money (a large sum of money), everyone in the tribe would contribute a small amount to make up that large sum. They did this as an act of charity, so that none of their members would be crushed by a huge compensation payment. Related to this is halal insurance, a form of mutual aid that I will explain in detail later. For now, remember that pooling wealth to reduce loss is a completely legitimate act. The debate focuses on how it operates and the conditions and framework under which it is conducted.
Uncertainty (gharar)
Arguments against traditional insurance claim it involves interest (riba), uncertainty (gharar), and gambling (maisir). In this article, I will focus on the strongest and most central of these objections: uncertainty.
For this article, let us define insurance as common types like car, home, pet, medical, and business insurance, rather than more complex products like life insurance or reinsurance.
The traditional view holds that Islam forbids uncertain transactions. In insurance, you do not know when a risk will occur after buying a policy. Most people pay premiums without getting a return, so it is considered impermissible because you are unsure if you will ever have an accident.
On the other hand, halal insurance or mutual insurance is allowed because it is fundamentally compensation for loss. Although it looks like traditional insurance, it is actually a good deed. The compensation received might be more or less than the actual loss, similar to how tribal members pool money to pay blood money (diya) for someone, which is considered a virtuous act.
After studying the argument that traditional insurance is illegal due to uncertainty, I concluded that it is not the type of uncertain transaction the Hadith intended to forbid. Let me tell you why.
Hadith involving uncertain transactions:
Sahih Muslim records: Abu Hurairah reported that the Messenger of Allah (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him) forbade speculative sales (bai al-gharar).
Jami` at-Tirmidhi records that the Prophet said: Do not sell what you do not have.
Sahih al-Bukhari and Sahih Muslim record: Ibn Umar reported that the Messenger of Allah (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him) forbade the sale of fruit until it is ripe and free from disease.
Musnad Ahmad and Sunan Ibn Majah record: The Prophet forbade buying an unborn animal in its mother's womb, selling milk in the udder without weighing it in a container, buying war booty before it is distributed, giving charity before receiving the booty, and buying the catch of a diver.
Musnad Ahmad records: The Prophet forbade buying a runaway slave.
Ibn al-Athir al-Ansari records: The Prophet forbade selling fruit before it is ripe.
Sahih al-Bukhari and Sahih Muslim record: The Messenger of Allah allowed the transaction of 'Araya (gifting a date palm to someone, who can then trade the fresh dates on the tree for dried dates by estimation) for amounts less than 5 awsaq (about 653 kilograms), meaning it is allowed to sell fresh dates on the tree in exchange for old dried dates.
Aisha reported: I said, O Messenger of Allah, people borrow bread and yeast from their neighbors and return more or less than what they borrowed. Is this allowed? He said: This does no harm. This is the normal state for people, and they do not want increases or decreases. (Mentioned in Financial Transactions in Islamic Jurisprudence by Zuhayli, page 254). Another narration from Muadh ibn Jabal says: Take the larger and give the smaller, or take the smaller and give the larger; the best among you is the one who is best at repaying debts.
Sahih Muslim records that Ibn Abbas (may Allah be pleased with them) reported that when the Prophet of Allah (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him) came to Medina, they were paying in advance for fruit for one or two years, so he said: Whoever pays in advance must do so for a specified weight and a determined time.
From (1) we can see, as we have already discussed, that transactions with uncertainty are forbidden. But from hadiths (2)-(6) we can analyze why this is done: in each of these cases, the goal is to have a clear, definite contract that leaves no room for dispute, and secondly, the reason for the prohibition is that the harm of the transaction is greater than its benefit.
My view is that traditional insurance is not such a contract because it is clear enough.
Let us look at hadiths (7)-(9): these are just some hadiths where the Prophet allowed some uncertainty in contracts to make things easier for people and merchants, or because it is a custom of the people, and the benefits of the transaction outweigh the harms.
Therefore, we can clearly see that Islam does support some uncertainty in money matters. Thus, the benefits and trading customs of traditional insurance are enough to make it analogous, rather than a forbidden form of uncertainty.
Finally, I find that when people examine the rulings on modern transactions, these are seen as involving a degree of uncertainty, and it is hard for people to define exactly how these rulings, which are seen as legal like Islamic insurance, differ from traditional insurance which is seen as illegal.
Arguments for the negative
The fundamental issue is whether what is bought in an insurance contract is tangible and certain enough to make the contract valid. The Prophet forbade a person from buying a diver's catch until he actually received the catch, returned, and began selling the tangible fish, because it was not clear what was being bought or sold. The subject of the contract must be certain.
But let us imagine the modern era, where big data and historical statistics allow us to model average catches very accurately. In this case, I think there is no problem for Tesco, for example, to sign a one-year contract with a fishing company to provide whatever it catches, as the quantity of the catch is predictable based on known historical averages.
In the insurance industry, insurance companies use big data to gain certainty about their revenue. The question is, do consumers get that same level of certainty? In a competitive market, this helps companies price the product they sell to customers: safety or peace of mind.
Safety or peace of mind might sound like intangible goals. Think of a security guard who gets paid to provide safety. What does that look like? He stands there waiting for the one day a year he is needed, and he stays on call the rest of the time. His job is not just waiting, but also handling any other requests the client might have. Similarly, insurance companies sign contracts, have agents talk to you, provide documents when you need them, and investigate when you file a claim. They are not asked to pay claims every day, but they provide clear and practical services.
A property manager who arranges services for a landlord is another example. If a property needs repairs, the manager handles them. A law firm hired to handle legal requirements is another. Both the property manager and the law firm want to profit from the deal. This is similar to a car or home insurance contract, where the insurance company covers the cost of any damage or theft that might happen.
In short, insurance is a clear contract in our time.
A positive view
Insurance provides certainty, which is important for the business world and for people's daily lives. The Prophet specifically allowed bai salam (letting farmers sell their crops in advance so they can raise money now) because it truly helps people live more easily. As seen in Hadith 9, he weighed the uncertainty of the trade against the benefits and decided the benefits were greater.
I also find the charm in Hadith 7 and 8. They do not apply perfectly here, but they show that unequal exchanges in business deals are sometimes acceptable. In the case of 7, it helps ease business in an area where date palms are the main crop. In the case of 8, it allows for the repayment of debt in a flexible way. Usually, a person must repay a debt exactly, without even adding a gift, to avoid it being seen as interest. However, in this case, maintaining community unity is more important than anything else.
Notice how the Prophet set a simple standard for what is allowed in 7. 650 kilograms is a large measurement, and the Prophet allowed araya trades for amounts less than that. For example, he could have set the weight at 10 kilograms, but his intention was to make business and life easier, not to create difficulties.
Insurance is vital for businesses to maintain steady shipping every month and prevent crises. It also helps help large deals because insurance companies often participate by underwriting the risk of failed transactions or acting as guarantors for all parties. These are all important lubricants for our economy. insurance creates a large amount of wealth, which is then invested throughout society—this is also an important part of a healthy economy.
Insurance has many other benefits, and this article outlines some of them well. In short, the focus is on insurance. While it may have a degree of uncertainty, it is still reasonable because it has great benefits, and our Sharia historically does allow for some beneficial uncertain transactions if the pros outweigh the cons.
Arguments for Muslim insurance.
The concept of blood money mutual aid (diya) is the inspiration for the Muslim insurance models proposed in our time. The basic concept is that a group of people pools their money together, not for profit, but to support each other. I like the cooperative model, and if such a model exists nearby, I would be happy to encourage people to use it—essentially, it is more like a charitable public welfare cause.
But fundamentally, the Muslim insurance model is the same as the traditional model in its important structural elements. The goal of both organizations is to create a surplus, pay the salaries of employees and managers, pool the participants' cash, and then pay claims with that cash. In the Muslim insurance model, there is also a mutual benefit element similar to an exchange contract. It is not just about donating money and ending it there; rather, there is an expectation when donating that the Muslim insurance pool will provide dividends if the donor is in need.
Secondly, if we go back to the blood money situation that Muslim insurance is often compared to, the money was not actually pooled and then invested by the tribe. When disaster struck, the individual tribe would still pay the price, so in a way, this is a purer form of gift (hiba) because there was no contract between the tribes. However, in today's non-tribal and atomized society, this is impractical, so the Muslim insurance model allows people to receive payments in advance. This certainly creates an expectation—and that expectation is profit. So my point is that the Muslim insurance industry has already compromised on the pure blood money setup for practical purposes. Doing so makes it almost identical to traditional insurance companies. If this is acknowledged, then there is actually almost no other substantive difference between the two models.
Yes, the traditional model can be said to be more profit-driven, does not pay any dividends to participants, and charges higher fees. But in reality, from the perspective of the 21st century, we live in a world of free capital flow. International finance and financial institutions span multiple continents, and the population size is incomparable to that of a thousand years ago. We need large-scale Muslim insurance companies to function, and that requires incredible effort. It is unrealistic to expect anyone to handle all this without a profit motive, and existing Muslim insurance companies are also for-profit. The main insurance providers are those who set them up and fund them through Islamic windows—essentially the only entities that can help start a Muslim insurance company—and they will make money from it just like traditional insurance businesses. The only difference is the structure, but the profit motive is exactly the same. They price risks and solve funding shortages just like traditional insurance companies, although in a pure Muslim insurance model, dividends might be distributed based on how much a person contributes because it is a charity, and if there is a loss, other members share it.
Finally, the Cooperative company in the UK is a great model; I learned more about them and actually participated in projects during my research, and they return profits to members and offer discounts in their stores. Interestingly, they performed very poorly before they became commercialized, but after commercialization, they now run very efficiently.
Concluding remarks
This is the longest article I have published on IFG because I need to elaborate more on the arguments presented, as this is a minority position. Please note that this article is just a summary of my views. A more comprehensive analysis would extend to tens of thousands of words. For example, every hadith mentioned has had countless pages written about it over the centuries, and fully analyzing them would require a small book, not to mention all the other relevant hadith that were not mentioned.
A few final points need to be briefly emphasized.
In my view, the legitimacy of Muslim insurance and traditional insurance is almost identical, except for the following points.
Insurance companies invest in haram areas, and if you get a certain return at the end, such as with life insurance, I need to think about this further, but at first glance, the same ruling applies to any fund stock you invest in that has haram components.
In cases where you buy insurance related to property loss, such as car insurance, rather than for any investment motive, I initially think there is no problem because you are signing a contract with the insurance company, and you do not need to worry about what they do with the money.
Life insurance may have special problems compared to other types of insurance, and I cannot comment on this until further research.
Regarding mandatory insurance like car insurance or employer liability insurance, this is certainly fine from the perspective of Sharia, even if all my arguments above are wrong.
Also, as I said at the beginning, my thinking on this topic is still maturing as I research it more deeply. I really want to hear what others think about what is written here, including your ideas and criticisms, so we can learn more from each other.
More resources:
Uncertainty in contracts and its impact on modern applications – Dr. Muhammad Al-Ameen Ad-Dareer [Arabic]
The insurance system – its reality and legal implications – SH. Mustafa Zarqa [Arabic]
Radd al-Muhtaar ala al-Durr al-Mukhtaar Sharh Tanweer al-Absaar – Muhammad Ameen ibn Abideen [Arabic] view all
Summary: Muslim Knowledge Guide China: Is Insurance Halal or Haram? Takaful, Riba and Gharar Explained is presented here as a clear English Islamic finance essay for Muslim readers, starting with this scene: I translated this article today from the Islamic Finance Guru website . The original is in English. Interestingly, many of the points in the article match what I have written before, and I swear I had never read this piece until now. It keeps the original names, numbers, mosque details, food notes, photographs, and cultural context while focusing on Islamic Finance, Takaful, Halal Insurance.
I translated this article today from the Islamic Finance Guru website . The original is in English. Interestingly, many of the points in the article match what I have written before, and I swear I had never read this piece until now.

In today's world, there are countless sheikhs who are experts in scripture, and many elites who are good at finance. However, it is rare to find a scholar who understands both. This makes it hard for many jurists to make accurate judgments on new, cutting-edge issues. The author of this article, Ibrahim Khan, has both a background in financial theory and practical experience. He holds a bachelor's degree in philosophy, politics, and economics from Oxford University and worked as a private equity and venture capital lawyer in New York City. He also has a solid education in scripture, holding a degree in Islamic studies from the Al Salam Institute and a master's degree in Islamic finance. He is a rare talent in the field of contemporary Islamic finance.
Insurance: Is it Haram or Halal?
(Insurance: Is it halal?)
Author: Ibrahim Khan
Translator: Yehya
Main text:
I suspect this is the most controversial article to appear on IFG. Why do I say that? Most of my views on Islamic finance align with the mainstream, but as I have researched the insurance industry more deeply, I have found myself changing some of my ideas. Here are my preliminary views. I believe most types of insurance should be considered permissible (compliant with Sharia).
I would also add, perhaps you do not realize, that a minority of scholars, both living and deceased, believe insurance is compliant with Sharia. Although the view that insurance is forbidden is common, the view that it is permissible is not new. These scholars who believe insurance is permissible include Sheikh Mustafa Zarqa, Sheikh Ali Al-Khafeef, and Nejatullah Siddiqi. There are also some quite prominent modern scholars, but I have not held academic discussions with them. If they feel it is necessary, they can state their own views.
Basic premise
The basic premise I want everyone to remember is that Islamic Sharia does allow us to use forms of financing to help those who suffer losses due to unknown risks. Traditionally, in the Arab region, if someone in a tribe needed to pay blood money (a large sum of money), everyone in the tribe would contribute a small amount to make up that large sum. They did this as an act of charity, so that none of their members would be crushed by a huge compensation payment. Related to this is halal insurance, a form of mutual aid that I will explain in detail later. For now, remember that pooling wealth to reduce loss is a completely legitimate act. The debate focuses on how it operates and the conditions and framework under which it is conducted.
Uncertainty (gharar)
Arguments against traditional insurance claim it involves interest (riba), uncertainty (gharar), and gambling (maisir). In this article, I will focus on the strongest and most central of these objections: uncertainty.
For this article, let us define insurance as common types like car, home, pet, medical, and business insurance, rather than more complex products like life insurance or reinsurance.
The traditional view holds that Islam forbids uncertain transactions. In insurance, you do not know when a risk will occur after buying a policy. Most people pay premiums without getting a return, so it is considered impermissible because you are unsure if you will ever have an accident.
On the other hand, halal insurance or mutual insurance is allowed because it is fundamentally compensation for loss. Although it looks like traditional insurance, it is actually a good deed. The compensation received might be more or less than the actual loss, similar to how tribal members pool money to pay blood money (diya) for someone, which is considered a virtuous act.
After studying the argument that traditional insurance is illegal due to uncertainty, I concluded that it is not the type of uncertain transaction the Hadith intended to forbid. Let me tell you why.
Hadith involving uncertain transactions:
Sahih Muslim records: Abu Hurairah reported that the Messenger of Allah (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him) forbade speculative sales (bai al-gharar).
Jami` at-Tirmidhi records that the Prophet said: Do not sell what you do not have.
Sahih al-Bukhari and Sahih Muslim record: Ibn Umar reported that the Messenger of Allah (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him) forbade the sale of fruit until it is ripe and free from disease.
Musnad Ahmad and Sunan Ibn Majah record: The Prophet forbade buying an unborn animal in its mother's womb, selling milk in the udder without weighing it in a container, buying war booty before it is distributed, giving charity before receiving the booty, and buying the catch of a diver.
Musnad Ahmad records: The Prophet forbade buying a runaway slave.
Ibn al-Athir al-Ansari records: The Prophet forbade selling fruit before it is ripe.
Sahih al-Bukhari and Sahih Muslim record: The Messenger of Allah allowed the transaction of 'Araya (gifting a date palm to someone, who can then trade the fresh dates on the tree for dried dates by estimation) for amounts less than 5 awsaq (about 653 kilograms), meaning it is allowed to sell fresh dates on the tree in exchange for old dried dates.
Aisha reported: I said, O Messenger of Allah, people borrow bread and yeast from their neighbors and return more or less than what they borrowed. Is this allowed? He said: This does no harm. This is the normal state for people, and they do not want increases or decreases. (Mentioned in Financial Transactions in Islamic Jurisprudence by Zuhayli, page 254). Another narration from Muadh ibn Jabal says: Take the larger and give the smaller, or take the smaller and give the larger; the best among you is the one who is best at repaying debts.
Sahih Muslim records that Ibn Abbas (may Allah be pleased with them) reported that when the Prophet of Allah (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him) came to Medina, they were paying in advance for fruit for one or two years, so he said: Whoever pays in advance must do so for a specified weight and a determined time.
From (1) we can see, as we have already discussed, that transactions with uncertainty are forbidden. But from hadiths (2)-(6) we can analyze why this is done: in each of these cases, the goal is to have a clear, definite contract that leaves no room for dispute, and secondly, the reason for the prohibition is that the harm of the transaction is greater than its benefit.
My view is that traditional insurance is not such a contract because it is clear enough.
Let us look at hadiths (7)-(9): these are just some hadiths where the Prophet allowed some uncertainty in contracts to make things easier for people and merchants, or because it is a custom of the people, and the benefits of the transaction outweigh the harms.
Therefore, we can clearly see that Islam does support some uncertainty in money matters. Thus, the benefits and trading customs of traditional insurance are enough to make it analogous, rather than a forbidden form of uncertainty.
Finally, I find that when people examine the rulings on modern transactions, these are seen as involving a degree of uncertainty, and it is hard for people to define exactly how these rulings, which are seen as legal like Islamic insurance, differ from traditional insurance which is seen as illegal.
Arguments for the negative
The fundamental issue is whether what is bought in an insurance contract is tangible and certain enough to make the contract valid. The Prophet forbade a person from buying a diver's catch until he actually received the catch, returned, and began selling the tangible fish, because it was not clear what was being bought or sold. The subject of the contract must be certain.
But let us imagine the modern era, where big data and historical statistics allow us to model average catches very accurately. In this case, I think there is no problem for Tesco, for example, to sign a one-year contract with a fishing company to provide whatever it catches, as the quantity of the catch is predictable based on known historical averages.
In the insurance industry, insurance companies use big data to gain certainty about their revenue. The question is, do consumers get that same level of certainty? In a competitive market, this helps companies price the product they sell to customers: safety or peace of mind.
Safety or peace of mind might sound like intangible goals. Think of a security guard who gets paid to provide safety. What does that look like? He stands there waiting for the one day a year he is needed, and he stays on call the rest of the time. His job is not just waiting, but also handling any other requests the client might have. Similarly, insurance companies sign contracts, have agents talk to you, provide documents when you need them, and investigate when you file a claim. They are not asked to pay claims every day, but they provide clear and practical services.
A property manager who arranges services for a landlord is another example. If a property needs repairs, the manager handles them. A law firm hired to handle legal requirements is another. Both the property manager and the law firm want to profit from the deal. This is similar to a car or home insurance contract, where the insurance company covers the cost of any damage or theft that might happen.
In short, insurance is a clear contract in our time.
A positive view
Insurance provides certainty, which is important for the business world and for people's daily lives. The Prophet specifically allowed bai salam (letting farmers sell their crops in advance so they can raise money now) because it truly helps people live more easily. As seen in Hadith 9, he weighed the uncertainty of the trade against the benefits and decided the benefits were greater.
I also find the charm in Hadith 7 and 8. They do not apply perfectly here, but they show that unequal exchanges in business deals are sometimes acceptable. In the case of 7, it helps ease business in an area where date palms are the main crop. In the case of 8, it allows for the repayment of debt in a flexible way. Usually, a person must repay a debt exactly, without even adding a gift, to avoid it being seen as interest. However, in this case, maintaining community unity is more important than anything else.
Notice how the Prophet set a simple standard for what is allowed in 7. 650 kilograms is a large measurement, and the Prophet allowed araya trades for amounts less than that. For example, he could have set the weight at 10 kilograms, but his intention was to make business and life easier, not to create difficulties.
Insurance is vital for businesses to maintain steady shipping every month and prevent crises. It also helps help large deals because insurance companies often participate by underwriting the risk of failed transactions or acting as guarantors for all parties. These are all important lubricants for our economy. insurance creates a large amount of wealth, which is then invested throughout society—this is also an important part of a healthy economy.
Insurance has many other benefits, and this article outlines some of them well. In short, the focus is on insurance. While it may have a degree of uncertainty, it is still reasonable because it has great benefits, and our Sharia historically does allow for some beneficial uncertain transactions if the pros outweigh the cons.
Arguments for Muslim insurance.
The concept of blood money mutual aid (diya) is the inspiration for the Muslim insurance models proposed in our time. The basic concept is that a group of people pools their money together, not for profit, but to support each other. I like the cooperative model, and if such a model exists nearby, I would be happy to encourage people to use it—essentially, it is more like a charitable public welfare cause.
But fundamentally, the Muslim insurance model is the same as the traditional model in its important structural elements. The goal of both organizations is to create a surplus, pay the salaries of employees and managers, pool the participants' cash, and then pay claims with that cash. In the Muslim insurance model, there is also a mutual benefit element similar to an exchange contract. It is not just about donating money and ending it there; rather, there is an expectation when donating that the Muslim insurance pool will provide dividends if the donor is in need.
Secondly, if we go back to the blood money situation that Muslim insurance is often compared to, the money was not actually pooled and then invested by the tribe. When disaster struck, the individual tribe would still pay the price, so in a way, this is a purer form of gift (hiba) because there was no contract between the tribes. However, in today's non-tribal and atomized society, this is impractical, so the Muslim insurance model allows people to receive payments in advance. This certainly creates an expectation—and that expectation is profit. So my point is that the Muslim insurance industry has already compromised on the pure blood money setup for practical purposes. Doing so makes it almost identical to traditional insurance companies. If this is acknowledged, then there is actually almost no other substantive difference between the two models.
Yes, the traditional model can be said to be more profit-driven, does not pay any dividends to participants, and charges higher fees. But in reality, from the perspective of the 21st century, we live in a world of free capital flow. International finance and financial institutions span multiple continents, and the population size is incomparable to that of a thousand years ago. We need large-scale Muslim insurance companies to function, and that requires incredible effort. It is unrealistic to expect anyone to handle all this without a profit motive, and existing Muslim insurance companies are also for-profit. The main insurance providers are those who set them up and fund them through Islamic windows—essentially the only entities that can help start a Muslim insurance company—and they will make money from it just like traditional insurance businesses. The only difference is the structure, but the profit motive is exactly the same. They price risks and solve funding shortages just like traditional insurance companies, although in a pure Muslim insurance model, dividends might be distributed based on how much a person contributes because it is a charity, and if there is a loss, other members share it.
Finally, the Cooperative company in the UK is a great model; I learned more about them and actually participated in projects during my research, and they return profits to members and offer discounts in their stores. Interestingly, they performed very poorly before they became commercialized, but after commercialization, they now run very efficiently.
Concluding remarks
This is the longest article I have published on IFG because I need to elaborate more on the arguments presented, as this is a minority position. Please note that this article is just a summary of my views. A more comprehensive analysis would extend to tens of thousands of words. For example, every hadith mentioned has had countless pages written about it over the centuries, and fully analyzing them would require a small book, not to mention all the other relevant hadith that were not mentioned.
A few final points need to be briefly emphasized.
In my view, the legitimacy of Muslim insurance and traditional insurance is almost identical, except for the following points.
Insurance companies invest in haram areas, and if you get a certain return at the end, such as with life insurance, I need to think about this further, but at first glance, the same ruling applies to any fund stock you invest in that has haram components.
In cases where you buy insurance related to property loss, such as car insurance, rather than for any investment motive, I initially think there is no problem because you are signing a contract with the insurance company, and you do not need to worry about what they do with the money.
Life insurance may have special problems compared to other types of insurance, and I cannot comment on this until further research.
Regarding mandatory insurance like car insurance or employer liability insurance, this is certainly fine from the perspective of Sharia, even if all my arguments above are wrong.
Also, as I said at the beginning, my thinking on this topic is still maturing as I research it more deeply. I really want to hear what others think about what is written here, including your ideas and criticisms, so we can learn more from each other.
More resources:
Uncertainty in contracts and its impact on modern applications – Dr. Muhammad Al-Ameen Ad-Dareer [Arabic]
The insurance system – its reality and legal implications – SH. Mustafa Zarqa [Arabic]
Radd al-Muhtaar ala al-Durr al-Mukhtaar Sharh Tanweer al-Absaar – Muhammad Ameen ibn Abideen [Arabic]
Muslim Knowledge Guide China: Is Insurance Halal or Haram? Takaful, Riba and Gharar Explained
Articles • yusuf908 posted the article • 0 comments • 8 views • 19 hours ago
Summary: Muslim Knowledge Guide China: Is Insurance Halal or Haram? Takaful, Riba and Gharar Explained is presented here as a clear English Islamic finance essay for Muslim readers, starting with this scene: I translated this article today from the Islamic Finance Guru website . The original is in English. Interestingly, many of the points in the article match what I have written before, and I swear I had never read this piece until now. It keeps the original names, numbers, mosque details, food notes, photographs, and cultural context while focusing on Islamic Finance, Takaful, Halal Insurance.
I translated this article today from the Islamic Finance Guru website . The original is in English. Interestingly, many of the points in the article match what I have written before, and I swear I had never read this piece until now.
In today's world, there are countless sheikhs who are experts in scripture, and many elites who are good at finance. However, it is rare to find a scholar who understands both. This makes it hard for many jurists to make accurate judgments on new, cutting-edge issues. The author of this article, Ibrahim Khan, has both a background in financial theory and practical experience. He holds a bachelor's degree in philosophy, politics, and economics from Oxford University and worked as a private equity and venture capital lawyer in New York City. He also has a solid education in scripture, holding a degree in Islamic studies from the Al Salam Institute and a master's degree in Islamic finance. He is a rare talent in the field of contemporary Islamic finance.
Insurance: Is it Haram or Halal?
(Insurance: Is it halal?)
Author: Ibrahim Khan
Translator: Yehya
Main text:
I suspect this is the most controversial article to appear on IFG. Why do I say that? Most of my views on Islamic finance align with the mainstream, but as I have researched the insurance industry more deeply, I have found myself changing some of my ideas. Here are my preliminary views. I believe most types of insurance should be considered permissible (compliant with Sharia).
I would also add, perhaps you do not realize, that a minority of scholars, both living and deceased, believe insurance is compliant with Sharia. Although the view that insurance is forbidden is common, the view that it is permissible is not new. These scholars who believe insurance is permissible include Sheikh Mustafa Zarqa, Sheikh Ali Al-Khafeef, and Nejatullah Siddiqi. There are also some quite prominent modern scholars, but I have not held academic discussions with them. If they feel it is necessary, they can state their own views.
Basic premise
The basic premise I want everyone to remember is that Islamic Sharia does allow us to use forms of financing to help those who suffer losses due to unknown risks. Traditionally, in the Arab region, if someone in a tribe needed to pay blood money (a large sum of money), everyone in the tribe would contribute a small amount to make up that large sum. They did this as an act of charity, so that none of their members would be crushed by a huge compensation payment. Related to this is halal insurance, a form of mutual aid that I will explain in detail later. For now, remember that pooling wealth to reduce loss is a completely legitimate act. The debate focuses on how it operates and the conditions and framework under which it is conducted.
Uncertainty (gharar)
Arguments against traditional insurance claim it involves interest (riba), uncertainty (gharar), and gambling (maisir). In this article, I will focus on the strongest and most central of these objections: uncertainty.
For this article, let us define insurance as common types like car, home, pet, medical, and business insurance, rather than more complex products like life insurance or reinsurance.
The traditional view holds that Islam forbids uncertain transactions. In insurance, you do not know when a risk will occur after buying a policy. Most people pay premiums without getting a return, so it is considered impermissible because you are unsure if you will ever have an accident.
On the other hand, halal insurance or mutual insurance is allowed because it is fundamentally compensation for loss. Although it looks like traditional insurance, it is actually a good deed. The compensation received might be more or less than the actual loss, similar to how tribal members pool money to pay blood money (diya) for someone, which is considered a virtuous act.
After studying the argument that traditional insurance is illegal due to uncertainty, I concluded that it is not the type of uncertain transaction the Hadith intended to forbid. Let me tell you why.
Hadith involving uncertain transactions:
Sahih Muslim records: Abu Hurairah reported that the Messenger of Allah (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him) forbade speculative sales (bai al-gharar).
Jami` at-Tirmidhi records that the Prophet said: Do not sell what you do not have.
Sahih al-Bukhari and Sahih Muslim record: Ibn Umar reported that the Messenger of Allah (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him) forbade the sale of fruit until it is ripe and free from disease.
Musnad Ahmad and Sunan Ibn Majah record: The Prophet forbade buying an unborn animal in its mother's womb, selling milk in the udder without weighing it in a container, buying war booty before it is distributed, giving charity before receiving the booty, and buying the catch of a diver.
Musnad Ahmad records: The Prophet forbade buying a runaway slave.
Ibn al-Athir al-Ansari records: The Prophet forbade selling fruit before it is ripe.
Sahih al-Bukhari and Sahih Muslim record: The Messenger of Allah allowed the transaction of 'Araya (gifting a date palm to someone, who can then trade the fresh dates on the tree for dried dates by estimation) for amounts less than 5 awsaq (about 653 kilograms), meaning it is allowed to sell fresh dates on the tree in exchange for old dried dates.
Aisha reported: I said, O Messenger of Allah, people borrow bread and yeast from their neighbors and return more or less than what they borrowed. Is this allowed? He said: This does no harm. This is the normal state for people, and they do not want increases or decreases. (Mentioned in Financial Transactions in Islamic Jurisprudence by Zuhayli, page 254). Another narration from Muadh ibn Jabal says: Take the larger and give the smaller, or take the smaller and give the larger; the best among you is the one who is best at repaying debts.
Sahih Muslim records that Ibn Abbas (may Allah be pleased with them) reported that when the Prophet of Allah (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him) came to Medina, they were paying in advance for fruit for one or two years, so he said: Whoever pays in advance must do so for a specified weight and a determined time.
From (1) we can see, as we have already discussed, that transactions with uncertainty are forbidden. But from hadiths (2)-(6) we can analyze why this is done: in each of these cases, the goal is to have a clear, definite contract that leaves no room for dispute, and secondly, the reason for the prohibition is that the harm of the transaction is greater than its benefit.
My view is that traditional insurance is not such a contract because it is clear enough.
Let us look at hadiths (7)-(9): these are just some hadiths where the Prophet allowed some uncertainty in contracts to make things easier for people and merchants, or because it is a custom of the people, and the benefits of the transaction outweigh the harms.
Therefore, we can clearly see that Islam does support some uncertainty in money matters. Thus, the benefits and trading customs of traditional insurance are enough to make it analogous, rather than a forbidden form of uncertainty.
Finally, I find that when people examine the rulings on modern transactions, these are seen as involving a degree of uncertainty, and it is hard for people to define exactly how these rulings, which are seen as legal like Islamic insurance, differ from traditional insurance which is seen as illegal.
Arguments for the negative
The fundamental issue is whether what is bought in an insurance contract is tangible and certain enough to make the contract valid. The Prophet forbade a person from buying a diver's catch until he actually received the catch, returned, and began selling the tangible fish, because it was not clear what was being bought or sold. The subject of the contract must be certain.
But let us imagine the modern era, where big data and historical statistics allow us to model average catches very accurately. In this case, I think there is no problem for Tesco, for example, to sign a one-year contract with a fishing company to provide whatever it catches, as the quantity of the catch is predictable based on known historical averages.
In the insurance industry, insurance companies use big data to gain certainty about their revenue. The question is, do consumers get that same level of certainty? In a competitive market, this helps companies price the product they sell to customers: safety or peace of mind.
Safety or peace of mind might sound like intangible goals. Think of a security guard who gets paid to provide safety. What does that look like? He stands there waiting for the one day a year he is needed, and he stays on call the rest of the time. His job is not just waiting, but also handling any other requests the client might have. Similarly, insurance companies sign contracts, have agents talk to you, provide documents when you need them, and investigate when you file a claim. They are not asked to pay claims every day, but they provide clear and practical services.
A property manager who arranges services for a landlord is another example. If a property needs repairs, the manager handles them. A law firm hired to handle legal requirements is another. Both the property manager and the law firm want to profit from the deal. This is similar to a car or home insurance contract, where the insurance company covers the cost of any damage or theft that might happen.
In short, insurance is a clear contract in our time.
A positive view
Insurance provides certainty, which is important for the business world and for people's daily lives. The Prophet specifically allowed bai salam (letting farmers sell their crops in advance so they can raise money now) because it truly helps people live more easily. As seen in Hadith 9, he weighed the uncertainty of the trade against the benefits and decided the benefits were greater.
I also find the charm in Hadith 7 and 8. They do not apply perfectly here, but they show that unequal exchanges in business deals are sometimes acceptable. In the case of 7, it helps ease business in an area where date palms are the main crop. In the case of 8, it allows for the repayment of debt in a flexible way. Usually, a person must repay a debt exactly, without even adding a gift, to avoid it being seen as interest. However, in this case, maintaining community unity is more important than anything else.
Notice how the Prophet set a simple standard for what is allowed in 7. 650 kilograms is a large measurement, and the Prophet allowed araya trades for amounts less than that. For example, he could have set the weight at 10 kilograms, but his intention was to make business and life easier, not to create difficulties.
Insurance is vital for businesses to maintain steady shipping every month and prevent crises. It also helps help large deals because insurance companies often participate by underwriting the risk of failed transactions or acting as guarantors for all parties. These are all important lubricants for our economy. insurance creates a large amount of wealth, which is then invested throughout society—this is also an important part of a healthy economy.
Insurance has many other benefits, and this article outlines some of them well. In short, the focus is on insurance. While it may have a degree of uncertainty, it is still reasonable because it has great benefits, and our Sharia historically does allow for some beneficial uncertain transactions if the pros outweigh the cons.
Arguments for Muslim insurance.
The concept of blood money mutual aid (diya) is the inspiration for the Muslim insurance models proposed in our time. The basic concept is that a group of people pools their money together, not for profit, but to support each other. I like the cooperative model, and if such a model exists nearby, I would be happy to encourage people to use it—essentially, it is more like a charitable public welfare cause.
But fundamentally, the Muslim insurance model is the same as the traditional model in its important structural elements. The goal of both organizations is to create a surplus, pay the salaries of employees and managers, pool the participants' cash, and then pay claims with that cash. In the Muslim insurance model, there is also a mutual benefit element similar to an exchange contract. It is not just about donating money and ending it there; rather, there is an expectation when donating that the Muslim insurance pool will provide dividends if the donor is in need.
Secondly, if we go back to the blood money situation that Muslim insurance is often compared to, the money was not actually pooled and then invested by the tribe. When disaster struck, the individual tribe would still pay the price, so in a way, this is a purer form of gift (hiba) because there was no contract between the tribes. However, in today's non-tribal and atomized society, this is impractical, so the Muslim insurance model allows people to receive payments in advance. This certainly creates an expectation—and that expectation is profit. So my point is that the Muslim insurance industry has already compromised on the pure blood money setup for practical purposes. Doing so makes it almost identical to traditional insurance companies. If this is acknowledged, then there is actually almost no other substantive difference between the two models.
Yes, the traditional model can be said to be more profit-driven, does not pay any dividends to participants, and charges higher fees. But in reality, from the perspective of the 21st century, we live in a world of free capital flow. International finance and financial institutions span multiple continents, and the population size is incomparable to that of a thousand years ago. We need large-scale Muslim insurance companies to function, and that requires incredible effort. It is unrealistic to expect anyone to handle all this without a profit motive, and existing Muslim insurance companies are also for-profit. The main insurance providers are those who set them up and fund them through Islamic windows—essentially the only entities that can help start a Muslim insurance company—and they will make money from it just like traditional insurance businesses. The only difference is the structure, but the profit motive is exactly the same. They price risks and solve funding shortages just like traditional insurance companies, although in a pure Muslim insurance model, dividends might be distributed based on how much a person contributes because it is a charity, and if there is a loss, other members share it.
Finally, the Cooperative company in the UK is a great model; I learned more about them and actually participated in projects during my research, and they return profits to members and offer discounts in their stores. Interestingly, they performed very poorly before they became commercialized, but after commercialization, they now run very efficiently.
Concluding remarks
This is the longest article I have published on IFG because I need to elaborate more on the arguments presented, as this is a minority position. Please note that this article is just a summary of my views. A more comprehensive analysis would extend to tens of thousands of words. For example, every hadith mentioned has had countless pages written about it over the centuries, and fully analyzing them would require a small book, not to mention all the other relevant hadith that were not mentioned.
A few final points need to be briefly emphasized.
In my view, the legitimacy of Muslim insurance and traditional insurance is almost identical, except for the following points.
Insurance companies invest in haram areas, and if you get a certain return at the end, such as with life insurance, I need to think about this further, but at first glance, the same ruling applies to any fund stock you invest in that has haram components.
In cases where you buy insurance related to property loss, such as car insurance, rather than for any investment motive, I initially think there is no problem because you are signing a contract with the insurance company, and you do not need to worry about what they do with the money.
Life insurance may have special problems compared to other types of insurance, and I cannot comment on this until further research.
Regarding mandatory insurance like car insurance or employer liability insurance, this is certainly fine from the perspective of Sharia, even if all my arguments above are wrong.
Also, as I said at the beginning, my thinking on this topic is still maturing as I research it more deeply. I really want to hear what others think about what is written here, including your ideas and criticisms, so we can learn more from each other.
More resources:
Uncertainty in contracts and its impact on modern applications – Dr. Muhammad Al-Ameen Ad-Dareer [Arabic]
The insurance system – its reality and legal implications – SH. Mustafa Zarqa [Arabic]
Radd al-Muhtaar ala al-Durr al-Mukhtaar Sharh Tanweer al-Absaar – Muhammad Ameen ibn Abideen [Arabic] view all
Summary: Muslim Knowledge Guide China: Is Insurance Halal or Haram? Takaful, Riba and Gharar Explained is presented here as a clear English Islamic finance essay for Muslim readers, starting with this scene: I translated this article today from the Islamic Finance Guru website . The original is in English. Interestingly, many of the points in the article match what I have written before, and I swear I had never read this piece until now. It keeps the original names, numbers, mosque details, food notes, photographs, and cultural context while focusing on Islamic Finance, Takaful, Halal Insurance.
I translated this article today from the Islamic Finance Guru website . The original is in English. Interestingly, many of the points in the article match what I have written before, and I swear I had never read this piece until now.

In today's world, there are countless sheikhs who are experts in scripture, and many elites who are good at finance. However, it is rare to find a scholar who understands both. This makes it hard for many jurists to make accurate judgments on new, cutting-edge issues. The author of this article, Ibrahim Khan, has both a background in financial theory and practical experience. He holds a bachelor's degree in philosophy, politics, and economics from Oxford University and worked as a private equity and venture capital lawyer in New York City. He also has a solid education in scripture, holding a degree in Islamic studies from the Al Salam Institute and a master's degree in Islamic finance. He is a rare talent in the field of contemporary Islamic finance.
Insurance: Is it Haram or Halal?
(Insurance: Is it halal?)
Author: Ibrahim Khan
Translator: Yehya
Main text:
I suspect this is the most controversial article to appear on IFG. Why do I say that? Most of my views on Islamic finance align with the mainstream, but as I have researched the insurance industry more deeply, I have found myself changing some of my ideas. Here are my preliminary views. I believe most types of insurance should be considered permissible (compliant with Sharia).
I would also add, perhaps you do not realize, that a minority of scholars, both living and deceased, believe insurance is compliant with Sharia. Although the view that insurance is forbidden is common, the view that it is permissible is not new. These scholars who believe insurance is permissible include Sheikh Mustafa Zarqa, Sheikh Ali Al-Khafeef, and Nejatullah Siddiqi. There are also some quite prominent modern scholars, but I have not held academic discussions with them. If they feel it is necessary, they can state their own views.
Basic premise
The basic premise I want everyone to remember is that Islamic Sharia does allow us to use forms of financing to help those who suffer losses due to unknown risks. Traditionally, in the Arab region, if someone in a tribe needed to pay blood money (a large sum of money), everyone in the tribe would contribute a small amount to make up that large sum. They did this as an act of charity, so that none of their members would be crushed by a huge compensation payment. Related to this is halal insurance, a form of mutual aid that I will explain in detail later. For now, remember that pooling wealth to reduce loss is a completely legitimate act. The debate focuses on how it operates and the conditions and framework under which it is conducted.
Uncertainty (gharar)
Arguments against traditional insurance claim it involves interest (riba), uncertainty (gharar), and gambling (maisir). In this article, I will focus on the strongest and most central of these objections: uncertainty.
For this article, let us define insurance as common types like car, home, pet, medical, and business insurance, rather than more complex products like life insurance or reinsurance.
The traditional view holds that Islam forbids uncertain transactions. In insurance, you do not know when a risk will occur after buying a policy. Most people pay premiums without getting a return, so it is considered impermissible because you are unsure if you will ever have an accident.
On the other hand, halal insurance or mutual insurance is allowed because it is fundamentally compensation for loss. Although it looks like traditional insurance, it is actually a good deed. The compensation received might be more or less than the actual loss, similar to how tribal members pool money to pay blood money (diya) for someone, which is considered a virtuous act.
After studying the argument that traditional insurance is illegal due to uncertainty, I concluded that it is not the type of uncertain transaction the Hadith intended to forbid. Let me tell you why.
Hadith involving uncertain transactions:
Sahih Muslim records: Abu Hurairah reported that the Messenger of Allah (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him) forbade speculative sales (bai al-gharar).
Jami` at-Tirmidhi records that the Prophet said: Do not sell what you do not have.
Sahih al-Bukhari and Sahih Muslim record: Ibn Umar reported that the Messenger of Allah (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him) forbade the sale of fruit until it is ripe and free from disease.
Musnad Ahmad and Sunan Ibn Majah record: The Prophet forbade buying an unborn animal in its mother's womb, selling milk in the udder without weighing it in a container, buying war booty before it is distributed, giving charity before receiving the booty, and buying the catch of a diver.
Musnad Ahmad records: The Prophet forbade buying a runaway slave.
Ibn al-Athir al-Ansari records: The Prophet forbade selling fruit before it is ripe.
Sahih al-Bukhari and Sahih Muslim record: The Messenger of Allah allowed the transaction of 'Araya (gifting a date palm to someone, who can then trade the fresh dates on the tree for dried dates by estimation) for amounts less than 5 awsaq (about 653 kilograms), meaning it is allowed to sell fresh dates on the tree in exchange for old dried dates.
Aisha reported: I said, O Messenger of Allah, people borrow bread and yeast from their neighbors and return more or less than what they borrowed. Is this allowed? He said: This does no harm. This is the normal state for people, and they do not want increases or decreases. (Mentioned in Financial Transactions in Islamic Jurisprudence by Zuhayli, page 254). Another narration from Muadh ibn Jabal says: Take the larger and give the smaller, or take the smaller and give the larger; the best among you is the one who is best at repaying debts.
Sahih Muslim records that Ibn Abbas (may Allah be pleased with them) reported that when the Prophet of Allah (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him) came to Medina, they were paying in advance for fruit for one or two years, so he said: Whoever pays in advance must do so for a specified weight and a determined time.
From (1) we can see, as we have already discussed, that transactions with uncertainty are forbidden. But from hadiths (2)-(6) we can analyze why this is done: in each of these cases, the goal is to have a clear, definite contract that leaves no room for dispute, and secondly, the reason for the prohibition is that the harm of the transaction is greater than its benefit.
My view is that traditional insurance is not such a contract because it is clear enough.
Let us look at hadiths (7)-(9): these are just some hadiths where the Prophet allowed some uncertainty in contracts to make things easier for people and merchants, or because it is a custom of the people, and the benefits of the transaction outweigh the harms.
Therefore, we can clearly see that Islam does support some uncertainty in money matters. Thus, the benefits and trading customs of traditional insurance are enough to make it analogous, rather than a forbidden form of uncertainty.
Finally, I find that when people examine the rulings on modern transactions, these are seen as involving a degree of uncertainty, and it is hard for people to define exactly how these rulings, which are seen as legal like Islamic insurance, differ from traditional insurance which is seen as illegal.
Arguments for the negative
The fundamental issue is whether what is bought in an insurance contract is tangible and certain enough to make the contract valid. The Prophet forbade a person from buying a diver's catch until he actually received the catch, returned, and began selling the tangible fish, because it was not clear what was being bought or sold. The subject of the contract must be certain.
But let us imagine the modern era, where big data and historical statistics allow us to model average catches very accurately. In this case, I think there is no problem for Tesco, for example, to sign a one-year contract with a fishing company to provide whatever it catches, as the quantity of the catch is predictable based on known historical averages.
In the insurance industry, insurance companies use big data to gain certainty about their revenue. The question is, do consumers get that same level of certainty? In a competitive market, this helps companies price the product they sell to customers: safety or peace of mind.
Safety or peace of mind might sound like intangible goals. Think of a security guard who gets paid to provide safety. What does that look like? He stands there waiting for the one day a year he is needed, and he stays on call the rest of the time. His job is not just waiting, but also handling any other requests the client might have. Similarly, insurance companies sign contracts, have agents talk to you, provide documents when you need them, and investigate when you file a claim. They are not asked to pay claims every day, but they provide clear and practical services.
A property manager who arranges services for a landlord is another example. If a property needs repairs, the manager handles them. A law firm hired to handle legal requirements is another. Both the property manager and the law firm want to profit from the deal. This is similar to a car or home insurance contract, where the insurance company covers the cost of any damage or theft that might happen.
In short, insurance is a clear contract in our time.
A positive view
Insurance provides certainty, which is important for the business world and for people's daily lives. The Prophet specifically allowed bai salam (letting farmers sell their crops in advance so they can raise money now) because it truly helps people live more easily. As seen in Hadith 9, he weighed the uncertainty of the trade against the benefits and decided the benefits were greater.
I also find the charm in Hadith 7 and 8. They do not apply perfectly here, but they show that unequal exchanges in business deals are sometimes acceptable. In the case of 7, it helps ease business in an area where date palms are the main crop. In the case of 8, it allows for the repayment of debt in a flexible way. Usually, a person must repay a debt exactly, without even adding a gift, to avoid it being seen as interest. However, in this case, maintaining community unity is more important than anything else.
Notice how the Prophet set a simple standard for what is allowed in 7. 650 kilograms is a large measurement, and the Prophet allowed araya trades for amounts less than that. For example, he could have set the weight at 10 kilograms, but his intention was to make business and life easier, not to create difficulties.
Insurance is vital for businesses to maintain steady shipping every month and prevent crises. It also helps help large deals because insurance companies often participate by underwriting the risk of failed transactions or acting as guarantors for all parties. These are all important lubricants for our economy. insurance creates a large amount of wealth, which is then invested throughout society—this is also an important part of a healthy economy.
Insurance has many other benefits, and this article outlines some of them well. In short, the focus is on insurance. While it may have a degree of uncertainty, it is still reasonable because it has great benefits, and our Sharia historically does allow for some beneficial uncertain transactions if the pros outweigh the cons.
Arguments for Muslim insurance.
The concept of blood money mutual aid (diya) is the inspiration for the Muslim insurance models proposed in our time. The basic concept is that a group of people pools their money together, not for profit, but to support each other. I like the cooperative model, and if such a model exists nearby, I would be happy to encourage people to use it—essentially, it is more like a charitable public welfare cause.
But fundamentally, the Muslim insurance model is the same as the traditional model in its important structural elements. The goal of both organizations is to create a surplus, pay the salaries of employees and managers, pool the participants' cash, and then pay claims with that cash. In the Muslim insurance model, there is also a mutual benefit element similar to an exchange contract. It is not just about donating money and ending it there; rather, there is an expectation when donating that the Muslim insurance pool will provide dividends if the donor is in need.
Secondly, if we go back to the blood money situation that Muslim insurance is often compared to, the money was not actually pooled and then invested by the tribe. When disaster struck, the individual tribe would still pay the price, so in a way, this is a purer form of gift (hiba) because there was no contract between the tribes. However, in today's non-tribal and atomized society, this is impractical, so the Muslim insurance model allows people to receive payments in advance. This certainly creates an expectation—and that expectation is profit. So my point is that the Muslim insurance industry has already compromised on the pure blood money setup for practical purposes. Doing so makes it almost identical to traditional insurance companies. If this is acknowledged, then there is actually almost no other substantive difference between the two models.
Yes, the traditional model can be said to be more profit-driven, does not pay any dividends to participants, and charges higher fees. But in reality, from the perspective of the 21st century, we live in a world of free capital flow. International finance and financial institutions span multiple continents, and the population size is incomparable to that of a thousand years ago. We need large-scale Muslim insurance companies to function, and that requires incredible effort. It is unrealistic to expect anyone to handle all this without a profit motive, and existing Muslim insurance companies are also for-profit. The main insurance providers are those who set them up and fund them through Islamic windows—essentially the only entities that can help start a Muslim insurance company—and they will make money from it just like traditional insurance businesses. The only difference is the structure, but the profit motive is exactly the same. They price risks and solve funding shortages just like traditional insurance companies, although in a pure Muslim insurance model, dividends might be distributed based on how much a person contributes because it is a charity, and if there is a loss, other members share it.
Finally, the Cooperative company in the UK is a great model; I learned more about them and actually participated in projects during my research, and they return profits to members and offer discounts in their stores. Interestingly, they performed very poorly before they became commercialized, but after commercialization, they now run very efficiently.
Concluding remarks
This is the longest article I have published on IFG because I need to elaborate more on the arguments presented, as this is a minority position. Please note that this article is just a summary of my views. A more comprehensive analysis would extend to tens of thousands of words. For example, every hadith mentioned has had countless pages written about it over the centuries, and fully analyzing them would require a small book, not to mention all the other relevant hadith that were not mentioned.
A few final points need to be briefly emphasized.
In my view, the legitimacy of Muslim insurance and traditional insurance is almost identical, except for the following points.
Insurance companies invest in haram areas, and if you get a certain return at the end, such as with life insurance, I need to think about this further, but at first glance, the same ruling applies to any fund stock you invest in that has haram components.
In cases where you buy insurance related to property loss, such as car insurance, rather than for any investment motive, I initially think there is no problem because you are signing a contract with the insurance company, and you do not need to worry about what they do with the money.
Life insurance may have special problems compared to other types of insurance, and I cannot comment on this until further research.
Regarding mandatory insurance like car insurance or employer liability insurance, this is certainly fine from the perspective of Sharia, even if all my arguments above are wrong.
Also, as I said at the beginning, my thinking on this topic is still maturing as I research it more deeply. I really want to hear what others think about what is written here, including your ideas and criticisms, so we can learn more from each other.
More resources:
Uncertainty in contracts and its impact on modern applications – Dr. Muhammad Al-Ameen Ad-Dareer [Arabic]
The insurance system – its reality and legal implications – SH. Mustafa Zarqa [Arabic]
Radd al-Muhtaar ala al-Durr al-Mukhtaar Sharh Tanweer al-Absaar – Muhammad Ameen ibn Abideen [Arabic]
Muslim Knowledge Guide Al-Azhar: Bank Interest, Riba Fatwa and Islamic Finance Debate
Articles • yusuf908 posted the article • 0 comments • 8 views • 3 hours ago
Summary: This Muslim knowledge guide translates and explains Mahmoud A. El-Gamal's discussion of an Al-Azhar fatwa on bank interest, fixed investment profits, riba, mudaraba, jurist disagreement, historical context, and whether bank returns can be treated as lawful investment income.
I posted a screenshot of a book written by Imam Chen Yufeng on my social media. At the end of the book, Imam Chen shares a personal experience regarding interest. He mentions that issue 168 of the Al-Azhar Journal once ruled bank interest as lawful. A friend later found the original source of this fatwa, along with a commentary article explaining the background of the ruling, titled
“The recent Azhar fatwā:Its logic, and historical background”
I will not post the link here, so please search for it yourself. The original text is in English and includes the Arabic version. I have translated the article below for your reference, as it complements the post I shared earlier.
You cannot buy Imam Chen's book, and there is no digital version, so please stop asking me how to purchase it.
“The recent Azhar fatwā:Its logic, and historical background”
Author: Mahmoud A. El-Gamal
Rice University, USA
Author's Preface:
I am not a jurist, but an academic researcher. Therefore, I am not qualified to endorse or reject this fatwa. The purpose of this article is only to explain and summarize the ruling. To explain what this fatwa says? It says nothing. How scholars view it and the logic behind it.
What does this religious ruling (fatwa) say?
It is perfectly fine to deposit your money in a bank and appoint the bank as your agent for investments in exchange for an agreed-upon profit. Neither the Quran nor the Hadith forbids this kind of deal where profit or payment is set in advance, as long as both sides agree to it.
There is no doubt that both sides agreeing to a set profit beforehand is allowed under Islamic law. It also makes logical sense so that each party knows exactly what their share will be.
As everyone knows, a bank only sets these profits or returns for clients after carefully studying global and local markets, economic conditions, the specifics of each deal, the type of investment, and the average expected profit.
This set profit rate can go up or down over time. For example, an investment project might start with a 4% return, grow to over 15%, and then recently drop back to near 10%.
The people who set these rates and manage their changes must follow government rules. Setting a fixed number in advance—especially in these times when honesty is rare—benefits both the investors and the bank.
Investors benefit from stable profit rates, which helps them plan their lives. Bank managers benefit from performance incentives, which push them to work harder to maximize profits and keep the bank profitable even after paying the investors their set returns. What if the bank loses money during that time? How can it set a profit rate in advance? The answer is that a bank might lose money on one investment but make a profit on many others, which covers the loss.
In short: it is allowed for someone to invest money through an institution into a bank or other financial firm with a pre-set profit. There is nothing suspicious about it. This type of transaction is judged by its benefits and is not considered associating partners with Allah (shirk). Therefore, investing money in a bank with a pre-agreed profit or return is allowed and causes no harm. Allah knows best.
What does this religious ruling (fatwa) not say?
Please note that this fatwa does not explicitly state that all bank interest is halal.
Dr. Tantawi has clearly stated elsewhere that interest on bank deposits is riba, and interest on bank loans is also riba. (See Mucamalat al-Bunuk..., 2001, pp. 139-142)
There are three points of contention here.
First, are funds held for business operations considered deposits?
Second, are funds borrowed for business operations considered loans?
Third, is it forbidden to pre-determine the profit for one party in an investment activity?
There is little disagreement regarding deposits.
There is substantial disagreement regarding loans:
Abdullah Al-Najjar explains Dr. Tantawi's position as follows:
Funds given to a bank cannot be seen as a form of loan because the bank has no need, and only those in need apply for loans. Anas ibn Malik reported that the Prophet said: 'On the night of the Ascension, I saw written on the gate of Paradise: Charity is rewarded tenfold, and a loan is rewarded eighteenfold.' I said: 'O Jibril!' Why is borrowing more expensive than giving charity? The angel Jibril said: 'Because a beggar asks when they still have something, but a borrower only asks when they are in urgent need.' — Sunan Ibn Majah
Therefore, if a transaction is not a loan, bank customers must be seen as investors who intend to seek profit from the bank (the bank announces the return rate they pay, and customers choose the bank they prefer).
Jurists believe that once deposit funds are used, they are promised, and because holding a guarantee (like a loan) is more reliable than holding a trust (like a deposit), the deposit contract becomes a loan, and any increase is forbidden interest (riba).
the 'preset profit' in profit-sharing (mudaraba) is the core of what this Islamic law forbids.
Al-Qaradawi and many others believe that the hadith regarding sharecropping (muzara'ah) provides the basis for the prohibition. The Sharia committee mentioned the claim of 'consensus' put forward by Ibn Qudamah in Al-Mughni and confirmed that this 'consensus' is as binding as the classical texts.
The 14th session of the Fiqh Academy, January 2003, Decision #133 (7/14), pages 20-24.
Religious law and secular law describe the relationship between a depositor and a bank as a loan relationship, not an agency relationship. In contrast, an investment agency is where an agent invests funds on behalf of a principal in exchange for a fixed wage or a share of the profits. In this regard, religious scholars have a consensus that the principal owns the investment funds and therefore has the right to receive investment gains and is responsible for losses, while the agent has the right to receive a fixed wage under the conditions set by the agency. Therefore, a traditional bank is not an investment agent for the depositor. The bank receives funds from the depositor and uses them, thereby guaranteeing said funds and making them a loan. In this regard, the loan must be repaid at face value without any increase.
For centuries, jurists from all schools have agreed that you cannot pre-set investment profits in any partnership, whether as a fixed amount or a percentage of the capital. This ruling is based on the idea that pre-setting profits guarantees the principal, which goes against the nature of a partnership where you must share both profits and losses. This consensus is well-established and has no reported disagreements. In this regard, Ibn Qudamah wrote in Al-Mughni (Volume 3, page 34): All scholars agree that if one or both parties set a known amount of profit, the partnership (qirad or mudaraba) becomes invalid. The consensus of religious scholars is itself a legal proof.
Pre-specifying profits
Dr. Tantawi and his supporters rejected the loan issue and held a long discussion on the problem of pre-set profits. Dr. Tantawi cited Abdul-Wahhab Khallaf and Dr. Ali Al-Khafif to support his view that it is inappropriate to limit investment institutions to traditional mudaraba, which has profit sharing but no specific profit amount.
The main argument for fixed profits
Tantawi (2001, page 131) quoted Khallaf (pages 94-104), Al-Khafif (pages 165-204), and others (pages 204-211) word for word, saying: In this era of corruption, dishonesty, and greed, not fixing profits as a percentage of capital would leave the principal at the mercy of the agents managing the investment funds, whether they are banks or other institutions.
Therefore, he and earlier scholars turned to the well-known issue of moral hazard, which is unrelated to profit distribution.
Second, once the loan or deposit argument is rejected, the remaining issue is how to handle the consensus theory in Al-Mughni and the hadith it is based on.
Is the claim of consensus accepted? Is it binding?
Does this decision have a basis in the Quran and Sunnah, or can it be overturned?
If a partnership is considered flawed because the profit margin is predetermined, does this make it forbidden interest (riba), or is it a permitted lease (ijara), such as whether a mutually agreed upon (though uncertain) wage payment is legal?
Hadith on tenant farming.
Hanzalah ibn Qays narrated: I asked Rafi ibn Khadij about renting land for gold and silver. Rafi replied: 'There is no harm in this. In the time of the Prophet, people rented land for the crops and straw that grew along the waterways. Sometimes there was a harvest, and sometimes there was none. People rented land this way, so the Prophet forbade it. As for rent that is fixed and guaranteed, there is no harm.'
— Sunan Ibn Majah
This hadith shows that it is forbidden to pre-arrange any geography, time, or quantity for land rented to tenant farmers. Jurists concluded that because of uncertainty, predetermined compensation for either party is not allowed. This ruling on tenant farming applies to other partnerships, including profit-sharing partnerships (mudaraba). Therefore, Ibn Qudamah believed that jurists reached a consensus that it is not allowed to pre-specify profits in a mudaraba.
Dr. Abdullah Al-Najjar wrote a detailed discussion on this hadith and the conclusions drawn from it. He argued that the prohibition does not stem from the condition of pre-specifying profit itself, but from the uncertainty (gharar) that could lead to disputes (citing the narrative and analysis in Al-Shawkani's Nayl Al-Awtar). On the other hand, he argued that this type of partnership is essentially an employment contract with an unknown reward, and is therefore full of uncertainty. However, a consensus ruling actually permits this contract (including profit sharing) despite the uncertainty (as Ibn Qudamah stated). Therefore, this type of partnership belongs to a category of contracts where uncertainty (including that caused by pre-specifying profit) is ignored, as long as it does not lead to legal disputes.
Dr. Al-Najjar presented many other arguments based on the analysis of Al-Shawkani and Ibn Qudamah. He said: This might be Rafi's own non-binding conclusion; it might be limited to specific types of tenant farming; Zayd ibn Thabit disagreed with this hadith, claiming it related to a specific incident where one person killed another (recorded by Abu Dawud); the hadith narrated by Ibn Umar suggests that renting land is permitted (recorded by Bukhari), which challenges the hadith; other companions of the Prophet, including Ibn Abbas and others, disagreed with Rafi's view. Ibn Qudamah said that some of Rafi's narrations differ from the consensus of the companions and must therefore be discarded.
At the Al-Azhar conference, Dr. Muhammad Rif'at Uthman presented a counter-argument. According to Al-Nawawi, the hadith does not forbid renting land for a fixed rent (which was the focus of previous arguments), but it does forbid pre-specifying profits.
Most jurists believe that a profit-sharing partnership (mudāraba) that is known to be flawed or invalid from the start is not allowed. Dr. Tantāwī focuses on the consensus view that when a mudāraba is considered flawed, such as when an investor's profit is specified in advance, the contract becomes an employment contract ('ijara). Under this, the entrepreneur or worker is entitled to a market wage, as noted by ibn al-Humām in Fath Al-Qadīr and Al-Shaficī in 'um. He summarizes this (2001, p. 133):
Therefore, we say that a bank investing for a pre-specified profit becomes an employee of the investor. The investor accepts the amount the bank gives them as their profit, and any excess profit, whatever it may be, is treated as the bank's wage. Thus, this type of transaction is free of interest (Ribā). In short, we cannot find any canonical text or convincing analogy that forbids specifying profit in advance as long as both parties agree.
Quotes from early jurists
Dr. Tantāwī (2001, p. 95) quotes Dr. Khallāf, who in turn quotes Muhammad Abduh's 1906 article in Manār (#9, p. 332): When a person gives their money to another for investment and receives a known profit, this does not constitute clearly forbidden Ribā, regardless of the pre-specified profit rate. This is because legal rules that disagree on forbidding pre-specified profit do not constitute the clear type of Ribā that ruins families. This type of transaction is beneficial to both the investor and the entrepreneur. In contrast, Ribā for the borrower is only due to need and is not their fault, while for the lender, Ribā leads to greed and a hardened heart. These two types of transactions cannot have the same legal status (hukm).
Dr. Khallāf, in Liwā' 'Islām (1951, #4 (11)), continues (quoted in the same, pp. 95-6): There is no evidence that profit cannot be specified in advance. Just as profit can be shared between two parties, the profit for one party can also be specified in advance. Such a condition might not align with the views of jurists, but it does not contradict any canonical text in the Quran or Sunnah.
Core argument
Dr. Khallaf summarizes the basis for the current Al-Azhar ruling as follows: The only objection to this type of transaction is the validity of mudāraba, which requires that profit must be set as a percentage share rather than a specific capital amount or percentage. My response to this objection is as follows: First, there is no evidence for this condition in the Quran or the Sunnah. We live in a very dishonest time now, and if we do not set a fixed profit for the investor, his partner will swallow up his wealth.
Second, if a mudāraba is considered flawed because it violates one of its conditions, the entrepreneur becomes an employee, and what he takes is considered a wage. There is no difference in calling it mudāraba or 'ijāra: it is a valid transaction that benefits the investor who cannot invest funds directly and benefits the entrepreneur who receives the funds. Therefore, this is a transaction that benefits both parties without harming either side or anyone else, and banning such a beneficial transaction will harm the Ummah.
Key points
Recent academic journals from Al-Azhar do allow certain types of bank interest to be used as investment profit.
This fatwa is at least a century old.
Most jurists oppose this fatwa.
A minority have questioned the authenticity, authority, and applicability of the hadith regarding sharecroppers.
A minority have questioned the logic of prohibiting the pre-specification of profit.
Can we still claim that a consensus exists?
If this issue is controversial, should we proceed with caution? Should we follow the view of the majority? view all
Summary: This Muslim knowledge guide translates and explains Mahmoud A. El-Gamal's discussion of an Al-Azhar fatwa on bank interest, fixed investment profits, riba, mudaraba, jurist disagreement, historical context, and whether bank returns can be treated as lawful investment income.
I posted a screenshot of a book written by Imam Chen Yufeng on my social media. At the end of the book, Imam Chen shares a personal experience regarding interest. He mentions that issue 168 of the Al-Azhar Journal once ruled bank interest as lawful. A friend later found the original source of this fatwa, along with a commentary article explaining the background of the ruling, titled
“The recent Azhar fatwā:Its logic, and historical background”
I will not post the link here, so please search for it yourself. The original text is in English and includes the Arabic version. I have translated the article below for your reference, as it complements the post I shared earlier.
You cannot buy Imam Chen's book, and there is no digital version, so please stop asking me how to purchase it.



“The recent Azhar fatwā:Its logic, and historical background”
Author: Mahmoud A. El-Gamal
Rice University, USA
Author's Preface:
I am not a jurist, but an academic researcher. Therefore, I am not qualified to endorse or reject this fatwa. The purpose of this article is only to explain and summarize the ruling. To explain what this fatwa says? It says nothing. How scholars view it and the logic behind it.
What does this religious ruling (fatwa) say?
It is perfectly fine to deposit your money in a bank and appoint the bank as your agent for investments in exchange for an agreed-upon profit. Neither the Quran nor the Hadith forbids this kind of deal where profit or payment is set in advance, as long as both sides agree to it.
There is no doubt that both sides agreeing to a set profit beforehand is allowed under Islamic law. It also makes logical sense so that each party knows exactly what their share will be.
As everyone knows, a bank only sets these profits or returns for clients after carefully studying global and local markets, economic conditions, the specifics of each deal, the type of investment, and the average expected profit.
This set profit rate can go up or down over time. For example, an investment project might start with a 4% return, grow to over 15%, and then recently drop back to near 10%.
The people who set these rates and manage their changes must follow government rules. Setting a fixed number in advance—especially in these times when honesty is rare—benefits both the investors and the bank.
Investors benefit from stable profit rates, which helps them plan their lives. Bank managers benefit from performance incentives, which push them to work harder to maximize profits and keep the bank profitable even after paying the investors their set returns. What if the bank loses money during that time? How can it set a profit rate in advance? The answer is that a bank might lose money on one investment but make a profit on many others, which covers the loss.
In short: it is allowed for someone to invest money through an institution into a bank or other financial firm with a pre-set profit. There is nothing suspicious about it. This type of transaction is judged by its benefits and is not considered associating partners with Allah (shirk). Therefore, investing money in a bank with a pre-agreed profit or return is allowed and causes no harm. Allah knows best.
What does this religious ruling (fatwa) not say?
Please note that this fatwa does not explicitly state that all bank interest is halal.
Dr. Tantawi has clearly stated elsewhere that interest on bank deposits is riba, and interest on bank loans is also riba. (See Mucamalat al-Bunuk..., 2001, pp. 139-142)
There are three points of contention here.
First, are funds held for business operations considered deposits?
Second, are funds borrowed for business operations considered loans?
Third, is it forbidden to pre-determine the profit for one party in an investment activity?
There is little disagreement regarding deposits.
There is substantial disagreement regarding loans:
Abdullah Al-Najjar explains Dr. Tantawi's position as follows:
Funds given to a bank cannot be seen as a form of loan because the bank has no need, and only those in need apply for loans. Anas ibn Malik reported that the Prophet said: 'On the night of the Ascension, I saw written on the gate of Paradise: Charity is rewarded tenfold, and a loan is rewarded eighteenfold.' I said: 'O Jibril!' Why is borrowing more expensive than giving charity? The angel Jibril said: 'Because a beggar asks when they still have something, but a borrower only asks when they are in urgent need.' — Sunan Ibn Majah
Therefore, if a transaction is not a loan, bank customers must be seen as investors who intend to seek profit from the bank (the bank announces the return rate they pay, and customers choose the bank they prefer).
Jurists believe that once deposit funds are used, they are promised, and because holding a guarantee (like a loan) is more reliable than holding a trust (like a deposit), the deposit contract becomes a loan, and any increase is forbidden interest (riba).
the 'preset profit' in profit-sharing (mudaraba) is the core of what this Islamic law forbids.
Al-Qaradawi and many others believe that the hadith regarding sharecropping (muzara'ah) provides the basis for the prohibition. The Sharia committee mentioned the claim of 'consensus' put forward by Ibn Qudamah in Al-Mughni and confirmed that this 'consensus' is as binding as the classical texts.
The 14th session of the Fiqh Academy, January 2003, Decision #133 (7/14), pages 20-24.
Religious law and secular law describe the relationship between a depositor and a bank as a loan relationship, not an agency relationship. In contrast, an investment agency is where an agent invests funds on behalf of a principal in exchange for a fixed wage or a share of the profits. In this regard, religious scholars have a consensus that the principal owns the investment funds and therefore has the right to receive investment gains and is responsible for losses, while the agent has the right to receive a fixed wage under the conditions set by the agency. Therefore, a traditional bank is not an investment agent for the depositor. The bank receives funds from the depositor and uses them, thereby guaranteeing said funds and making them a loan. In this regard, the loan must be repaid at face value without any increase.
For centuries, jurists from all schools have agreed that you cannot pre-set investment profits in any partnership, whether as a fixed amount or a percentage of the capital. This ruling is based on the idea that pre-setting profits guarantees the principal, which goes against the nature of a partnership where you must share both profits and losses. This consensus is well-established and has no reported disagreements. In this regard, Ibn Qudamah wrote in Al-Mughni (Volume 3, page 34): All scholars agree that if one or both parties set a known amount of profit, the partnership (qirad or mudaraba) becomes invalid. The consensus of religious scholars is itself a legal proof.
Pre-specifying profits
Dr. Tantawi and his supporters rejected the loan issue and held a long discussion on the problem of pre-set profits. Dr. Tantawi cited Abdul-Wahhab Khallaf and Dr. Ali Al-Khafif to support his view that it is inappropriate to limit investment institutions to traditional mudaraba, which has profit sharing but no specific profit amount.
The main argument for fixed profits
Tantawi (2001, page 131) quoted Khallaf (pages 94-104), Al-Khafif (pages 165-204), and others (pages 204-211) word for word, saying: In this era of corruption, dishonesty, and greed, not fixing profits as a percentage of capital would leave the principal at the mercy of the agents managing the investment funds, whether they are banks or other institutions.
Therefore, he and earlier scholars turned to the well-known issue of moral hazard, which is unrelated to profit distribution.
Second, once the loan or deposit argument is rejected, the remaining issue is how to handle the consensus theory in Al-Mughni and the hadith it is based on.
Is the claim of consensus accepted? Is it binding?
Does this decision have a basis in the Quran and Sunnah, or can it be overturned?
If a partnership is considered flawed because the profit margin is predetermined, does this make it forbidden interest (riba), or is it a permitted lease (ijara), such as whether a mutually agreed upon (though uncertain) wage payment is legal?
Hadith on tenant farming.
Hanzalah ibn Qays narrated: I asked Rafi ibn Khadij about renting land for gold and silver. Rafi replied: 'There is no harm in this. In the time of the Prophet, people rented land for the crops and straw that grew along the waterways. Sometimes there was a harvest, and sometimes there was none. People rented land this way, so the Prophet forbade it. As for rent that is fixed and guaranteed, there is no harm.'
— Sunan Ibn Majah
This hadith shows that it is forbidden to pre-arrange any geography, time, or quantity for land rented to tenant farmers. Jurists concluded that because of uncertainty, predetermined compensation for either party is not allowed. This ruling on tenant farming applies to other partnerships, including profit-sharing partnerships (mudaraba). Therefore, Ibn Qudamah believed that jurists reached a consensus that it is not allowed to pre-specify profits in a mudaraba.
Dr. Abdullah Al-Najjar wrote a detailed discussion on this hadith and the conclusions drawn from it. He argued that the prohibition does not stem from the condition of pre-specifying profit itself, but from the uncertainty (gharar) that could lead to disputes (citing the narrative and analysis in Al-Shawkani's Nayl Al-Awtar). On the other hand, he argued that this type of partnership is essentially an employment contract with an unknown reward, and is therefore full of uncertainty. However, a consensus ruling actually permits this contract (including profit sharing) despite the uncertainty (as Ibn Qudamah stated). Therefore, this type of partnership belongs to a category of contracts where uncertainty (including that caused by pre-specifying profit) is ignored, as long as it does not lead to legal disputes.
Dr. Al-Najjar presented many other arguments based on the analysis of Al-Shawkani and Ibn Qudamah. He said: This might be Rafi's own non-binding conclusion; it might be limited to specific types of tenant farming; Zayd ibn Thabit disagreed with this hadith, claiming it related to a specific incident where one person killed another (recorded by Abu Dawud); the hadith narrated by Ibn Umar suggests that renting land is permitted (recorded by Bukhari), which challenges the hadith; other companions of the Prophet, including Ibn Abbas and others, disagreed with Rafi's view. Ibn Qudamah said that some of Rafi's narrations differ from the consensus of the companions and must therefore be discarded.
At the Al-Azhar conference, Dr. Muhammad Rif'at Uthman presented a counter-argument. According to Al-Nawawi, the hadith does not forbid renting land for a fixed rent (which was the focus of previous arguments), but it does forbid pre-specifying profits.
Most jurists believe that a profit-sharing partnership (mudāraba) that is known to be flawed or invalid from the start is not allowed. Dr. Tantāwī focuses on the consensus view that when a mudāraba is considered flawed, such as when an investor's profit is specified in advance, the contract becomes an employment contract ('ijara). Under this, the entrepreneur or worker is entitled to a market wage, as noted by ibn al-Humām in Fath Al-Qadīr and Al-Shaficī in 'um. He summarizes this (2001, p. 133):
Therefore, we say that a bank investing for a pre-specified profit becomes an employee of the investor. The investor accepts the amount the bank gives them as their profit, and any excess profit, whatever it may be, is treated as the bank's wage. Thus, this type of transaction is free of interest (Ribā). In short, we cannot find any canonical text or convincing analogy that forbids specifying profit in advance as long as both parties agree.
Quotes from early jurists
Dr. Tantāwī (2001, p. 95) quotes Dr. Khallāf, who in turn quotes Muhammad Abduh's 1906 article in Manār (#9, p. 332): When a person gives their money to another for investment and receives a known profit, this does not constitute clearly forbidden Ribā, regardless of the pre-specified profit rate. This is because legal rules that disagree on forbidding pre-specified profit do not constitute the clear type of Ribā that ruins families. This type of transaction is beneficial to both the investor and the entrepreneur. In contrast, Ribā for the borrower is only due to need and is not their fault, while for the lender, Ribā leads to greed and a hardened heart. These two types of transactions cannot have the same legal status (hukm).
Dr. Khallāf, in Liwā' 'Islām (1951, #4 (11)), continues (quoted in the same, pp. 95-6): There is no evidence that profit cannot be specified in advance. Just as profit can be shared between two parties, the profit for one party can also be specified in advance. Such a condition might not align with the views of jurists, but it does not contradict any canonical text in the Quran or Sunnah.
Core argument
Dr. Khallaf summarizes the basis for the current Al-Azhar ruling as follows: The only objection to this type of transaction is the validity of mudāraba, which requires that profit must be set as a percentage share rather than a specific capital amount or percentage. My response to this objection is as follows: First, there is no evidence for this condition in the Quran or the Sunnah. We live in a very dishonest time now, and if we do not set a fixed profit for the investor, his partner will swallow up his wealth.
Second, if a mudāraba is considered flawed because it violates one of its conditions, the entrepreneur becomes an employee, and what he takes is considered a wage. There is no difference in calling it mudāraba or 'ijāra: it is a valid transaction that benefits the investor who cannot invest funds directly and benefits the entrepreneur who receives the funds. Therefore, this is a transaction that benefits both parties without harming either side or anyone else, and banning such a beneficial transaction will harm the Ummah.
Key points
Recent academic journals from Al-Azhar do allow certain types of bank interest to be used as investment profit.
This fatwa is at least a century old.
Most jurists oppose this fatwa.
A minority have questioned the authenticity, authority, and applicability of the hadith regarding sharecroppers.
A minority have questioned the logic of prohibiting the pre-specification of profit.
Can we still claim that a consensus exists?
If this issue is controversial, should we proceed with caution? Should we follow the view of the majority?
Muslim Knowledge Guide China: Islamic Finance Critique, Riba Debate and Banking Ethics
Articles • yusuf908 posted the article • 0 comments • 10 views • 4 hours ago
Summary: This Muslim knowledge guide presents a critical look at Islamic finance, including Sharia compliance, profit-and-loss sharing, murabaha, interest benchmarks, social justice concerns, scholar critiques, banking practice, and the gap between ideal Islamic finance and real-world banking.
This article is a collection and compilation of critiques on Islamic finance. The content mainly comes from the English Wikipedia entry 'Challenges in Islamic finance' and various scholars' blogs. The skepticism from these foreign scholars shows that so-called 'Islamic finance' is not as competitive as we imagine. It has many problems and perhaps should not even be promoted under the name 'Islamic'.
The challenge facing Islamic finance is the difficulty of providing modern financial services without violating Sharia law. The development of the Islamic banking and finance industry centers on avoiding interest, which is seen as an unjust and exploitative gain in trade or business.
Most Islamic banking customers come from the Gulf and developed countries in the Muslim world. Challenges include the fact that interest rate benchmarks have been used to set Islamic 'profit' rates, so the 'net returns are not substantially different from interest-based transactions'. In essence, Islamic banking is 'nothing more than a matter of changing contracts...'.
Religiously, Islamic finance prefers a profit and loss sharing (PLS) model. However, this causes problems, including the need to wait for investment projects to generate earnings before profits can be distributed, which increases risk and complexity for financial service providers.
The Islamic finance industry has been praised for developing a 'theory' into an industry worth about 2 trillion US dollars. It has attracted banking users who could not use traditional banking services for religious reasons, drawn non-Muslim bankers into the field, and (according to other supporters) introduced a more stable and lower-risk form of financing.
However, the industry is also criticized for ignoring its 'basic philosophy' and moving in the wrong direction for decades, leading both outsiders and ordinary Muslims to question it. First, it abandoned the original financing method advocated by its promoters—risk-sharing financing—in favor of fixed-markup purchase financing (especially murabaha). It then distorted the rules of fixed-markup murabaha to effectively provide traditional cash interest loans like conventional interest rates, but disguised them with 'word games' while bearing 'higher costs and greater risks'.
Other issues and complaints raised include that the industry has made no effort to help small vendors and the poor. How to deal with the problem of inflation; Delayed payments; A lack of currency and interest rate hedging; Or a lack of short-term cash deposit accounts that follow Sharia law; Most Islamic banking businesses are owned by non-Muslims;
In a series of interviews with Pakistani banking professionals (traditional and Islamic bankers, Sharia banking advisors, business people using finance, and management consultants) in 2008 and 2010, economist Faisal Khan noted that many Islamic bankers expressed 'skepticism' about the differences, or lack thereof, between traditional and Islamic banking products. He also noted a lack of external Sharia compliance audit requirements for Islamic banks in Pakistan, and that Sharia boards lacked awareness of their banks failing to follow Sharia-compliant practices or were unable to stop them. However, this did not stop devout people from using the banks (one person explained that if his Islamic bank was not truly following Sharia, 'the punishment is on their heads, not mine!'); I have done what I can do.
An estimate of customer preferences in the Pakistani banking industry (provided by a Pakistani banker) is that about 10% of customers are 'strictly traditional banking customers,' 20% are strictly Sharia-compliant banking customers, and 70% prefer Sharia-compliant banking but will use traditional banking if the 'price difference is significant.' A survey of Islamic and traditional banking customers found that Islamic banking customers were more observant (attending Hajj, performing namaz, keeping a beard, etc.), but they also had higher savings account balances than traditional banking customers, were older, better educated, traveled abroad more, and tended to open a second account at a traditional bank. Another study using 'official data' reported to the State Bank of Pakistan found that for lenders who received both Islamic (murabaha) financing and traditional loans, the default rate for traditional loans was more than twice that of the others. If the vote share of religious political parties increases, borrowers are 'less likely to default during Ramadan and in large cities, which suggests that religion—whether through personal piety or network effects—may play a role in determining loan defaults.'
As of 2016, the key challenges facing the Islamic finance industry, including Islamic bonds (sukuk), according to the 2015/16 State of the Global Islamic Economy Report and International Monetary Fund data, include:
Public awareness and understanding of Islamic financial products and services are low, which keeps people from using them.
There is a need to improve regulatory clarity and coordination, strengthen cooperation between Islamic and traditional financial standard-setters, and further improve regulatory tools. This is to address the complex financial products and company structures in some countries where regulatory frameworks fail to handle risks specific to the industry.
There is a scarcity of monetary policy tools that follow halal rules and a lack of understanding of monetary transmission mechanisms.
Underdeveloped safety nets and resolution frameworks. A lack of a complete Islamic deposit insurance system, where insurance premiums cannot be invested in halal assets, or a lack of a halal lender of last resort.
Regulators do not always have the ability or the will to ensure compliance with Islamic law.
Imitating traditional finance.
Some supporters of Islamic banking, such as Taqi Usmani, D. M. Qureshi, Saleh Abdullah Kamel, and Harris Irfan, and skeptics like Muhammad Akram Khan, Mohammad Omar Farooq, Feisal Khan, Mahmoud El-Gamal, and Timur Kuran, have studied the differences between Islamic and traditional banks and expressed regret over their similarities.
Taqi Usmani argues that Islamic banking has completely ignored its basic philosophy. First, it ignores the risk-sharing model (musharaka) between the financier and the user of funds, preferring fixed markup models like cost-plus financing (murabahah) and leasing (ijarah), which theoretically should only be used when risk-sharing is impractical. Second, it ignores the rules of cost-plus financing (murabahah) and leasing (ijarah) themselves. For example, it uses murabahah financing to borrow cash without even buying any goods in the process, or uses leasing (ijarah) where the lessor does not take responsibility for ownership or provide the lessee with any rights of use.
Interest rate benchmarks are used to set Islamic profit rates, so the net result is not substantially different from interest-based transactions. Ignoring these basic principles weakens the influence of Islamic banking among non-Muslims and especially the general public. Usmani believes the public now has the impression that Islamic banking is just a matter of swapping documents.
In March 2009, Usmani declared that 85% of Islamic bonds (sukuk) were non-Islamic. At the time, Usmani was the chairman of the Sharia board for the Accounting and Auditing Organization for Islamic Financial Institutions (AAOIFI), which sets standards for the global Islamic banking industry. Others, such as Hassan Heikal, have also criticized the authenticity of Islamic bonds.
Another pioneer of the Islamic banking industry, DM Qureshi, told a questioner at a 2005 Islamic banking conference, 'With all due respect, today's Islamic banking is a labeling industry.' Everything traditional is just given a new label, and then you call it Islamic.
Mohammad Najatuallah Siddiqui also criticized the trend of copying traditional interest-based financial tools and making minor changes to terms and phrases, such as using sukuk for bonds or tawarruq for loans. He said this trend gives Islamic finance a bad reputation. One Islamic bank, Lariba, even issued a fatwa from its Sharia board, which included famous Sheikh Yusuf al-Qaradawi, stating: 'We have reached a consensus that there is no objection to using the word interest to replace profit or rate of return.' Siddiqui stated that practitioners of Islamic finance are eager to prove in theory that their finance is different from traditional finance, but in reality:
They are busy finding ways to make them similar. Starting around the 1980s, Sharia advisors mainly focused on designing alternatives to financial products that were already familiar to the market while trying to keep them compliant with Sharia.
A Muslim banker at Deutsche Bank, Harris Irfan, wrote about how he felt when selling Islamic banking products that did not truly comply with Sharia. He complained that he felt like a fraud, suffering from incoherent pietism and cognitive dissonance while trying to fit a square peg into a round hole.
Muhammad Akram Khan, a senior expert in Islamic economics, criticized Islamic banks for claiming to build their business on something other than interest while designing a series of tricks and ruses to hide interest.
Mahmoud Amin El-Gamal and Mohammad Fadel complained that Islamic banks charge fees that are too high. Fadel described the foundation of the industry as charging fees to create financial products that seem to meet the formal requirements of Islamic law while keeping all the economic features of traditional products.
El-Gamal described modern Islamic finance as Sharia arbitrage, which means taking advantage of price differences between Islamic and traditional markets because devout Muslims are willing to pay extra for financing they believe follows Sharia. In this system, a bank's Sharia board earns fees by finding a suitable classical Arabic name for an Islamic-style product and using that name to justify the Islamic brand and make it seem more credible.
According to Sayyid Tahir:
There is no evidence that the arrangements of Islamic banks are based on any kind of Sharia foundation. For example, the formulas for legal liquidity requirements, capital adequacy, and risk management standards in Islamic banks are the same as those in interest-based banks.
According to AW Duskuki and Abdelazeem Abozaid, the only difference investigators might find between Islamic finance and traditional finance is
in technical details and legal form, but the substance is the same. In fact, Islamic bankers use the same financial calculations as other bankers to figure out the present and future value of investments. Therefore, in the end, skeptical Muslims and other critical outsiders will find that Islamic banks actually charge interest, just under a different name like commission or profit.
Saleh Abdullah Kamel, the 1997 winner of the IDB Islamic Banking Prize, has a different view. He pointed out that the industry only has most of the features of traditional banking.
The investment models favored by Islamic banks have turned into a mix of loans and investments. This hybrid model has most of the features of interest-based loans and the flaws of the Western capitalist system. It does not highlight the features of Islamic investment based on risk-sharing and actual investment. It does not recognize the guarantee of capital and its returns.
Another criticism of mimicking traditional banking (raised by Mahmoud El-Gamal) is that imitating the 'past returns and past trends' of traditional finance, such as seeking to be the first bank to offer an 'Islamic hedge fund,' can bring huge initial profit margins. This is because the imitator is a 'first mover' in the Islamic finance industry and has 'access to monopoly markets and free indirect publicity.' This tempts other banks to try to follow suit, but long-term returns are often limited.
Skeptics of the industry have offered several explanations for why they believe the industry has failed to provide a real alternative to traditional banking. According to MO Farooq, Sharia boards face pressure, and it is indeed difficult to review the institutions that pay their salaries, which is a modern version of the medieval 'court ulama'.
Feisal Khan argues that Islamic banking is caught in a 'vicious cycle' where traditional piety conflicts with feasibility. Inspired by the Islamic revival movement, a large number of pious Muslims seek to finance, invest, and save in ways that do not use interest and 'standard debt contracts'. Efforts to provide interest-free alternatives that truly comply with Sharia—'participatory' or 'profit and loss sharing' financing—have failed because, in most cases, information asymmetry between the financier and the recipient makes this financing model unprofitable. Large banks are unwilling to let this obstacle stop them from profiting from the vast market of pious Muslims, so they look for 'scholars willing to certify traditional instruments as Sharia-compliant' and give more business to the most helpful scholars. The result is a 'fairly wide' range of financial products and services that 'closely' mimic traditional products and services but come with Sharia certification, which adds extra transaction costs.
Another explanation given by Farooq, citing Muhammad Nejatullah Siddiqi, is the shortage of Sharia experts. Generally speaking, these experts have not received enough training in the intent or purpose of Islamic law, so they cannot evaluate the pros and cons of certain financial products. They also lack training in economics and cannot analyze the consequences of using complex financial transactions like tawarruq, which allows lenders to provide cash to borrowers in a way that complies with Islamic law but is more complex and costly than traditional loans.
Timur Kuran argues that the importance of the Islamic economic foundation in Islamic banking is that it is primarily a tool to reaffirm the primacy of Islam, and only secondarily a tool for radical economic change.
The promises and challenges of profit and risk sharing.
According to a 2006 paper by Suliman Hamdan Albalawi, at least in Saudi Arabia and Egypt, Islamic banks no longer use profit and loss sharing (PLS) techniques as a core principle, and Malaysia has also seen a decline.
A study on the most commonly used Islamic finance models found that PLS financing in major Islamic banks dropped from 17.34% in 1994-1996 to just 6.34% of total financing in 2000-2006. In the sample, debt-based contracts or debt-like instruments were more popular. During the 2004-2006 period, 54.42% of financing was based on murabaha, 16.31% on ijara, and 5.60% on salam and istisna. Another survey of the largest Islamic banks released in 2010 found that the use of PLS ranged between 0.5% and 21.6%.
Authors Humayon A. Dar and J. R. Presley explain why PLS tools, where the financier provides capital and partnership financing, have dropped to a negligible percentage, including:
Bank clients have a strong incentive to report less profit than they actually earn, because the higher the declared profit, the more money the client must pay to the financing bank. This puts banks at a disadvantage when using PLS compared to using fixed-income models.
Property rights are not clearly defined in most Muslim countries, which makes it hard to share profits and losses.
Islamic banks compete with traditional banks that have deep roots and hundreds of years of experience. Islamic banks are still unsure about their own policies and practices, so they avoid taking on risks they cannot predict.
Profit and Loss Sharing (PLS) is often not suitable or possible for things like short-term resource needs, working capital, or non-profit projects in education and health.
In some countries, interest is treated as a business expense and is tax-free, but profit is taxed as income. Because of this, business clients who get funding through PLS pay higher taxes than those who take out loans and pay interest.
At least as of 2001, there was no secondary market for Islamic financial products based on PLS.
As a form of PLS, profit-sharing partnership (mudaraba) gives bank shareholders limited control and leads to an unbalanced governance structure. Shareholders want a consistent and complementary control system, but profit-sharing partnership (mudaraba) financing lacks this.
The industry has not been able to get customers to accept the periodic losses (the L in PLS) that come with investments. The profit-sharing partnership (mudarabah) feature, where bank clients and investors share in the bank's losses, is thought to make Islamic financial institutions more stable than traditional banks. In its 2015 paper, Islamic Finance: Opportunities, Challenges, and Policy Options, the International Monetary Fund listed ensuring that profit-sharing investment accounts (PSIA), also known as profit-sharing partnership (mudarabah) accounts, are handled in a way that keeps the financial system stable as a major regulatory challenge. Supporters like Taqi Usmani argue that normal trade activities naturally lead to occasional losses. They believe that expecting stable returns without any risk of loss is an unnatural product of capitalist banking, caused by separating finance from normal trade. Over decades of development, Islamic banking has faced bad debts and even major financial difficulties, such as the significant corruption scandal at the Dubai Islamic Bank in 1998.
However, at least up until 2004, no Islamic bank had passed bad debts on to its depositors. No Islamic bank reduced the value of depositor accounts when writing down the value of bad assets for fear of losing those depositors.
Beyond the disadvantages for lenders, critic Feisal Khan argues that the widespread use of profit and loss sharing (PLS) could cause serious damage to the economy. He points out that if banks held direct equity in every business as required by profit-sharing contracts (mudarabah) and partnership contracts (musharakah), credit would shrink. Central banks would then be unable to use standard credit expansion methods, such as buying bonds or commercial paper, to prevent the liquidity crises that occur in modern economies. While purists like Usmani are correct that cost-plus financing (murabahah) and other fixed-income tools—which have already pushed out PLS—are essentially just another name for traditional banking, banning them in favor of more authentic profit and loss sharing might leave central banks unable to prevent economic contraction and extreme unemployment.
Besides ignoring profit and loss sharing in favor of cost-plus financing (murabahah), the industry is accused of failing to follow Islamic law rules for murabahah. It often fails to buy or sell the actual goods or inventory that are a key condition for compliance. Banks do this when they want to lend cash rather than fund a purchase, even though it adds extra costs without serving any other purpose. In 2008, Arabianbusiness.com complained that sometimes there were no goods at all, only cash flowing between banks, brokers, and borrowers. Often, the goods have nothing to do with the borrower's business, and there are not even enough existing goods in the world to account for all the transactions taking place. Two other researchers reported that billions of dollars in synthetic murabahah transactions have taken place in London over the years, with many people doubting whether the banks actually owned the deposits or even the underlying assets.
Early supporters of Islamic banking called for setting up different accounts for different types of deposits so that earnings could be distributed to each type. Critic Muhammad Akram Khan argues that, in reality, Islamic financial institutions pool all types of deposits together.
Critics complain that banks following Sharia rules often just take the word of the bank or the borrower that they are following compliance rules, without doing real audits to check if it is true. An observer (L. Al Nasser) complained that when dealing with peers in the industry, Sharia authorities show too much trust in their subjects. He said Sharia audits are needed to reach transparency and make sure institutions keep their promises to customers. Also, when doing outside Sharia audits, many auditors often complain about the high number of violations they see but cannot discuss because the records they check have been tampered with.
Illegal gains
Even though Islamic banks forbid charging interest, their profit margins are usually based on interest rates. Islamic banker Harris Irfan says there is no doubt that benchmarks like LIBOR are still necessary for Islamic banks, and most scholars accept this no matter how imperfect the solution seems. However, Muhammad Akram Khan wrote that following the traditional bank benchmark LIBOR goes against the original purpose of designing and offering Islamic financial products.
Skeptics also complain that the returns on Islamic bank accounts are very close to those of traditional banks, even though their different mechanisms should theoretically lead to different numbers. A 2014 study using the latest econometrics techniques looked at the long-term relationship between time deposit rates at traditional banks and participation banks (Islamic banks) in Turkey. It found that the time deposit rates of three out of four participation banks were significantly cointegrated with those of traditional banks, and the causal relationship between Islamic bank yields and traditional banks was permanent. Skeptics believe this closeness shows that Islamic banks manipulate their yields. These banks are often smaller and have weaker foundations, and they feel the need to reassure customers about their financial competitiveness and stability.
Liquidity issues
The Islamic banking and finance industry lacks a way to earn returns on money that is parked short-term while waiting for investment, which puts these banks at a disadvantage compared to traditional banks.
Banks and financial institutions must balance liquidity—the ability to quickly turn assets into cash or cash equivalents in an emergency without a big loss when depositors need it—with competitive rates of return on funds. Traditional banks use the interbank lending market to borrow money for liquidity needs and invest for any period, including very short terms, to boost their earnings. Calculating the return for any period is simple: just multiply the loan term by the interest rate.
However, the profit and loss sharing (PLS) model preferred in Islamic finance means profits can only be shared after the invested project is finished. Since you cannot determine profit or loss in the short term, money deposited for a short time does not earn any return. Islamic financial institutions cannot use traditional interbank lending markets for short-term borrowing.
Because there are few or not enough Islamic money market investment tools, as of 2002, the liquidity—or money without returns—held by Islamic banks was on average 40% higher than that of traditional banks. The Islamic Financial Services Board found that the daily volume of interbank transactions between Islamic financial institutions, between Islamic and traditional banks, and between Islamic financial institutions and central banks is very low compared to traditional money markets. While Muslim countries like Bahrain, Iran, Malaysia, and Sudan have started developing Islamic money markets and issuing securitized documents based on profit-sharing partnership (musharakah), profit-sharing investment (mudarabah), and leasing (ijarah), as of at least 2013, the lack of a proper and effective secondary market means these securities are much smaller in number than those in traditional capital markets.
Regarding non-PLS, or debt-based contracts, one study found that the business model of Islamic banks is changing over time and moving toward taking on more liquidity risk.
To solve the problem of money held for liquidity or lack of investment opportunities not earning a return, many Islamic financial institutions, such as the Islamic Development Bank and Faisal Islamic Bank of Egypt, openly earn interest from their excess funds, which are usually invested in safer debt-like or overseas debt instruments. Sharia experts do not forbid this practice, but instead provide the necessary religious rulings (fatwa) to comply with Sharia based on the rule of necessity (darurah). Researchers Frank Vogel and Frank Hayes write:
Islamic finance and banking scholars cite necessity to allow exceptions and relax rules. They issued fatwas allowing Islamic banks to deposit funds into interest-bearing accounts, especially abroad, because these banks have no other investments during periods of necessity. However, they usually attach conditions to such fatwas, such as requiring that illegal earnings be used for religious charitable purposes like charity, training, or research.
Lack of social responsibility
According to Islamic teachings, Islamic banks should adopt new financing policies and explore new investment channels to encourage development and improve the living standards of small-scale traders, but Taqi Usmani complains that few Islamic banks and financial institutions focus on this. Islamic scholar Mohammad Hashim Kamali regrets that Islamic banks focus on short-term financing, which mainly focuses on financing already produced goods rather than creating or increasing production capital or focusing on facilities like factories and infrastructure.
Muhammad Akram Khan also complains that in the process of merging with traditional banking, Islamic bank product development mimics traditional banking instead of building a different type of banking consistent with fair and equal income distribution and ethical investment models.
Another scholar, Mahmoud El-Gamal, also regrets that Islamic banks value form over substance and suggests rebranding Islamic finance to emphasize issues like community banking, microfinance, and socially responsible investment.
Criticisms from other unorthodox economists are even more intense.
Muhammad O. Farooq questions the basic premise of Islamic banking, arguing that it focuses on abolishing all interest at the expense of the big picture of pursuing overall economic justice, and cites the Quran's warning against the concentration of wealth:
Whatever Allah has restored to His Messenger from the people of the towns is for Allah and for the Messenger, and for the near relatives and the orphans and the needy and the wayfarer, so that it will not be a perpetual distribution among the rich from among you...
He questioned if greed and profit are bigger causes of exploitation than loan interest. He believes that in a competitive and regulated market, loan interest might not actually count as interest.
The Islamic banking and finance movement has adapted to political tyranny. It is supported by a small, wealthy class of rentiers in the Muslim world and is increasingly manipulated by global financial giants. Because of this, it is easily limited to just talking about opposing exploitation, and it might even unintentionally become a tool for exploitation itself. The real world is full of exploitation, such as child exploitation, sexual exploitation, and labor exploitation. Interest might only be a small part of global exploitation. However, supporters of Islamic economics and finance remain obsessed with interest.
He used the profit motive of the East India Company as an example. Before 1858, the company colonized and ruled India at the expense of the Muslim Mughal Empire, and its shares were equity rather than debt instruments. He found it curious that although books promoting Islamic banking and finance often claim that loan interest exploits the poor and Muslims, there is almost no empirical or focused research on exploitation or injustice within Islamic economics. For example, Farooq complained that in two important bibliographies on orthodox Islamic economics, there was not a single citation about exploitation or injustice. These were 'Muslim Economic Thought: A Survey of Contemporary Literature,' which had 700 entries under 51 subcategories across 115 pages, and 'Islamic Economics: Annotated Sources in English and Urdu' by Muhammad Akram Khan.
Timur Kuran complained that Islamic banks in Egypt and other Muslim countries follow Western banking practices and do little to help economic development or job creation. However, they do not follow the practices of Western venture capitalists, who have funded the global high-tech industry. Since the operating principles of venture capital are the same as profit and loss sharing, even though venture capital does not avoid haram (forbidden) products, using venture capital could bring huge benefits to Egypt and other poor Muslim countries seeking economic development.
Lack of uniformity in Sharia.
Most Islamic banks have their own Sharia boards to rule on bank policies. Researchers Frank Vogel and Frank Hayes believe the four schools of Sunni Islamic law (Madhhab) do not agree on Islamic banking practices. They apply Islamic teachings to business and finance in different ways. There are disagreements on specific points of religious law both between the four schools and within them. Also, Sharia boards sometimes change their minds and overturn previous decisions.
Ibrahim Warde asks if boards just rubber-stamp the banks that pay their salaries. Munawar Iqbal and Philip Molyneux say that disagreements between boards about what counts as Sharia-compliant can cause trouble, because customers might doubt if a bank is truly following the rules. If Islamic banks are not seen as truly Islamic, they will quickly lose most of their market.
Late payments and defaults.
In traditional finance, late payments or loan defaults are discouraged by interest that keeps adding up. Muhammad Akran Khan says that controlling and managing late accounts has become a thorny problem in Islamic finance. Although many suggestions have been made to fix the problem of overdue loans in Islamic banks, Ibrahim Warde says:
Islamic banks face serious issues with late payments, not to mention outright defaults, because some people use every legal and religious trick to delay. In most Islamic countries, various forms of fines and late fees have been set up, but they have been banned or found impossible to enforce. Late fees, in particular, have been treated the same as interest. Therefore, debtors know they can pay Islamic banks last because there is no cost for doing so.
Warde also complained:
Many business people who borrowed large amounts of money for a long time took advantage of the shift to Islamic finance. They paid back only the principal and wiped out the accumulated interest. Given the double-digit inflation over the years, this was usually a tiny amount.
How to deal with inflation
Inflation is also a problem for financing. Islamic banks do not copy traditional banks; they actually provide loans without interest or any other fees. Whether and how to compensate lenders for money that loses value due to inflation is a problem that "troubles" Islamic scholars. If lenders lose money by giving loans, businesses will not be able to get financing. Suggestions include indexing loans to inflation, which many scholars oppose because they think it is a form of interest and encourages inflation. Other ideas include measuring loans by commodities like gold, or doing more research to find an answer.
The influence of non-Muslims
Almost all, if not all, customers of Islamic banking and finance are Muslims. But most financial institutions that provide Islamic banking services are Western and owned by non-Muslims. Supporters of Islamic banking believe that the interest Western banks have in Islamic banking is proof of strong and growing market demand, and therefore an "achievement of the Islamic movement."
However, critics complain that these banks lack a deep commitment to the faith of Islamic banking, which means:
The Muslims hired at these institutions have almost no input into actual management. This leads the Muslim public to sometimes have well-founded doubts about how seriously these institutions follow Sharia law. A traditional Malaysian bank offering Islamic investment funds was found to have invested most of these funds in the gambling industry. The managers running these funds are not Muslim.
The interest from traditional banks does not show that Islamic banking is growing stronger. Instead, it shows how similar Islamic and traditional banks are, so the latter can enter the Islamic banking sector without making any real changes to their business. El-Gamal doubts whether the interest of large non-Muslim banks in Islamic finance comes from the profitability of Islamic financial business.
When the market hits a downturn, these banks are more likely to exit the industry. Harris Irfan believes that non-Muslim banks like Deutsche Bank lack an ideological commitment to Islamic banking, which has led and will continue to lead them to exit the industry when the market hits a downturn. In early 2011, during the bursting of the real estate bubble, Deutsche Bank did not keep a single dedicated Islamic structurer or salesperson. Islamic finance has become a luxury that banks cannot afford. Perhaps partly because of this, in February 2011, the Central Bank of Qatar ordered traditional lenders to close their Islamic operations in the country by the end of the year. The central bank insisted that it was too much for traditional banks to follow alternative capital adequacy rules for Islamic finance, and it was hard to supervise and monitor the Islamic and traditional operations of commercial banks because depositors' funds would get mixed together.
Stability/Risk
Opinions differ on whether Islamic banking is more stable and carries less risk than traditional banking.
Supporters, such as Bank Negara Malaysia Governor Zeti Akhtar Aziz, believe that Islamic financial institutions are more stable than traditional banks because they forbid speculation and, in theory, the two main types of Islamic bank accounts—current accounts and profit-sharing accounts (mudarabah)—pose less risk to the bank.
In a current account, customers do not earn any return, and there is theoretically no risk of loss because the bank does not invest the funds in the account.
In a profit-sharing investment account (mudaraba), an Islamic bank faces less risk from loan defaults because it shares this risk with the depositors. If a borrower cannot repay some or all of the money the bank lent them, the amount distributed to depositors decreases by the same amount. In a traditional bank, depositors receive fixed interest payments regardless of whether the bank's income drops due to loan defaults.
Critics complain that this stability comes at the cost of the stability of the account balances for depositors or partners—a term Islamic banks often use instead of customers or depositors—who face risks that those in traditional banks do not. a critic named Mahmoud A. El-Gamal argues:
In these institutions, investment account holders have neither the protection of creditors in an Islamic financial institution nor the protection of equity holders represented on the institution's board. This introduces many other well-documented risk factors to the institution.
On the other hand, Habib Ahmed wrote shortly after the 2009 financial crisis that the practice of Islamic finance has gradually moved closer to traditional finance, which exposes it to the same dangers of instability.
When looking at the practice of Islamic finance and its operating environment, one can find trends similar to those that led to the current crisis. Recently, stock and real estate markets in the Gulf region have also experienced speculative events. Finally, the Islamic finance industry has grown rapidly with the innovation of complex financial products that comply with Sharia law. The risks of these new Islamic financial products are complex because these tools involve multiple types of risk.
In any case, several Islamic banks have failed over the decades. In 1988, the Islamic investment company Ar-Ryan collapsed, causing thousands of small investors to lose their savings. Later, an anonymous donor from a Gulf country covered their losses. This was a heavy blow to Islamic finance at the time. In 1998, the management of Bank al Taqwa collapsed. Its annual report stated that depositors and shareholders lost more than 23% of their principal. It was later discovered that management violated bank rules by investing more than 60% of the bank's assets into a single project.
Turkey's Ihlas Finance House closed in 2001 due to liquidity problems and financial distress. Faisal Islamic Bank also ran into difficulties and closed its operations in the UK for regulatory reasons. According to The Economist magazine, the 2009 Dubai debt crisis showed that Islamic bonds could help inflate debt to unsustainable levels.
Economic recession
According to a 2010 survey by the International Monetary Fund, Islamic banks showed stronger resilience on average than conventional banks during the 2007 to 2008 financial crisis, but they faced greater losses when the crisis hit the real economy.
At the start of the 2007-2009 Great Recession, Islamic banks were unscathed. One supporter of Islamic banking wrote that the collapse of major Wall Street institutions, especially Lehman Brothers, should encourage economists worldwide to look at Islamic banking and finance as an alternative model. However, the impact of the financial recession gradually shifted to the real sector, affecting the Islamic banking industry. According to Ibrahim Warde, this shows that Islamic finance is not a panacea, and a faith-based system is not automatically immune to the unpredictability of the financial system.
Concentrated ownership
Munawar Iqbal and Philip Molyneux believe that concentrated ownership is another danger to the stability of the Islamic banking and finance industry. They wrote:
Three or four families own a large portion of the industry's shares. If anything happens to these families, or if the next generation of these families changes their priorities, this concentration of ownership could lead to serious financial instability and potentially cause the industry to collapse. Similarly, the experience of national-level trials is mostly based on the initiatives of non-elected rulers.
Macroeconomic risks
Harris Irafan warns that the macroeconomic risks of Islamic banking create a multi-billion dollar ticking time bomb of unhedged currency and interest rates. The difficulty, complexity, and cost of hedging these currencies and interest rates in a proper Islamic way are so high that as of 2015, the Islamic Development Bank was losing cash rapidly, as if it were funding a war. Without relying on conventional markets, it simply cannot consistently exchange dollars for euros or vice versa. Regional Islamic banks in the Middle East and Malaysia do not have trained professionals to understand and negotiate Sharia-compliant treasury swaps, nor are they willing to hire consultants with experience in this area.
High costs and low efficiency
Mohamed El-Gamal believes that because Islamic financial products mimic traditional ones but operate under Sharia rules, they require extra fees for jurists and lawyers, plus costs for multiple sales, special purpose vehicles, and ownership documentation. There are also costs linked to the special structures Islamic banks use for late payment penalties. Because of this, their financing costs are often higher than traditional products, while account returns are often lower.
El-Gamal also argues that another reason for the inefficiency and higher costs of Islamic banking, and why it always lags behind new financial products in the traditional industry, is the reliance on classical nominal contracts like cost-plus financing (murabaha) and leasing (ijara). These contracts follow classical texts written during a time when financial markets were very limited. They cannot untangle various risks, whereas modern financial markets and institutions like money markets, capital markets, and options markets are designed specifically to do that. On the other hand, improving the efficiency of these contracts or products alienates pious customers who believe they should follow classical forms.
In a major part of the financial market—home buying—Islamic finance could not compete with traditional finance in countries like the UK, Canada, and the US as of 2002 in the UK and 2009 in North America. According to Humayon Dar, the monthly payments for Sharia-compliant leasing contracts used by the Islamic investment banking division of Ahli United Bank in the UK were much higher than equivalent traditional mortgages. According to Hans Visser, the cost of Islamic home financing in Canada was 100 to 300 basis points higher than traditional financing, and 40 to 100 basis points higher in the United States. Visser believes Islamic loan financing costs more because Islamic loans have higher risk weights compared to traditional mortgages under international standards for minimum bank capital requirements set by Basel I and Basel II. In some cases, the Islamic profit rate is the same as a traditional mortgage rate, but the closing costs are several hundred dollars higher.
Reports by M. Kabir Hassan in 2005 and 2006 show that Islamic banks dominated by cost-plus financing (murabaha) are not very efficient. The banks studied had an average cost efficiency of 74% and an average profit efficiency of 84%. Although Islamic banks are less efficient at controlling costs, they are generally more efficient at generating profits. A later report on efficiency indicators like cost, allocation, technology, pure technology, and scale noted that, on average, the efficiency of the Islamic banking industry is relatively low compared to traditional banks in other parts of the world.
Other studies found that the efficiency of Islamic banks is, on average, slightly lower than traditional banks in non-Muslim majority regions, measured by bank revenue minus the profits paid to depositors.
This includes studies of Malaysian banks from 1997 to 2003 and Turkish Islamic banks between 1999 and 2001.
In contrast, a multi-country study covering a similar period from 1999 to 2005 found no significant difference in overall efficiency, according to a 2008 study that measured the cost, revenue, and profit efficiency of 43 Islamic banks and 37 traditional banks across 21 countries.
Common explanations for the flaws in the Islamic banking industry from the Islamic finance movement, as noted by M. O. Farooq, are:
Industry problems and challenges are part of a learning curve that will be solved over time.
Unless the industry operates within an Islamic society and environment, it will be hindered by non-Islamic influences and cannot operate according to its true nature.
While the truth of the second explanation cannot be verified until a complete Islamic society is established, Feisal Khan points out regarding the first defense that the industry has shown little evidence of progress since that argument was first made in 1993. That year, critic Timur Kuran highlighted problems in the industry, noting that Islamic banks are basically similar to traditional banks in practice, marginalizing equity-based, risk-sharing models while embracing short-term products and debt-like instruments, while supporter Ausaf Ahmad defended the industry by saying it was in the early stages of transitioning from traditional banking.
Seventeen years later, Islamic finance supporter Ibrahim Warde lamented that murabaha and similar sales products have not disappeared but have grown significantly, and today they make up the bulk of most Islamic banking business.
Most critics of Islamic banking call for more orthodoxy, doubling down on efforts to strictly enforce Sharia law. Some people, like M. O. Farooq and M. A. Khan, blame the industry's problems on treating loan interest as forbidden interest (riba) and the impracticality of trying to enforce that ban.
Finally, I am borrowing an article written by Talha Ahmed Iftikhar on his blog:
Not long ago, my friend wanted to buy furniture from a company that advertised that customers could use interest-free loans for up to 6 months provided by several banks to purchase their products. He decided to get this loan from an Islamic bank to stay compliant with Sharia, but he was shocked when the bank told him his invoice would increase by 30% because it included a profit margin. Then, the deal would be converted into a credit sale contract, and the amount would be paid back in installments over 6 months.
I asked the CEO how an Islamic bank could charge a 30% profit to someone who did not have the money to pay the full amount at once. Isn't this the strong exploiting the weak? Is this the same as the riba or usury that is condemned? His answer left me very confused: "We charge the same fees as the market." For those in need, we have a charity department. They call it a transaction. I left the meeting right away.
Murabaha is not a form of trade, but a banking product designed to trick Muslims into interest-based debt traps. Using it as an Islamic financing model must stop immediately, or at the very least, banks should be banned from using Islam to sell this product. Usury, or riba, is at the heart of an unfair economic system where the strong get stronger at the expense of the weak. Top officials at Islamic banks admit that this product hides the same interest rates used by other banks, which clearly shows these products will never help achieve social justice. view all
Summary: This Muslim knowledge guide presents a critical look at Islamic finance, including Sharia compliance, profit-and-loss sharing, murabaha, interest benchmarks, social justice concerns, scholar critiques, banking practice, and the gap between ideal Islamic finance and real-world banking.
This article is a collection and compilation of critiques on Islamic finance. The content mainly comes from the English Wikipedia entry 'Challenges in Islamic finance' and various scholars' blogs. The skepticism from these foreign scholars shows that so-called 'Islamic finance' is not as competitive as we imagine. It has many problems and perhaps should not even be promoted under the name 'Islamic'.

The challenge facing Islamic finance is the difficulty of providing modern financial services without violating Sharia law. The development of the Islamic banking and finance industry centers on avoiding interest, which is seen as an unjust and exploitative gain in trade or business.
Most Islamic banking customers come from the Gulf and developed countries in the Muslim world. Challenges include the fact that interest rate benchmarks have been used to set Islamic 'profit' rates, so the 'net returns are not substantially different from interest-based transactions'. In essence, Islamic banking is 'nothing more than a matter of changing contracts...'.
Religiously, Islamic finance prefers a profit and loss sharing (PLS) model. However, this causes problems, including the need to wait for investment projects to generate earnings before profits can be distributed, which increases risk and complexity for financial service providers.
The Islamic finance industry has been praised for developing a 'theory' into an industry worth about 2 trillion US dollars. It has attracted banking users who could not use traditional banking services for religious reasons, drawn non-Muslim bankers into the field, and (according to other supporters) introduced a more stable and lower-risk form of financing.
However, the industry is also criticized for ignoring its 'basic philosophy' and moving in the wrong direction for decades, leading both outsiders and ordinary Muslims to question it. First, it abandoned the original financing method advocated by its promoters—risk-sharing financing—in favor of fixed-markup purchase financing (especially murabaha). It then distorted the rules of fixed-markup murabaha to effectively provide traditional cash interest loans like conventional interest rates, but disguised them with 'word games' while bearing 'higher costs and greater risks'.
Other issues and complaints raised include that the industry has made no effort to help small vendors and the poor. How to deal with the problem of inflation; Delayed payments; A lack of currency and interest rate hedging; Or a lack of short-term cash deposit accounts that follow Sharia law; Most Islamic banking businesses are owned by non-Muslims;
In a series of interviews with Pakistani banking professionals (traditional and Islamic bankers, Sharia banking advisors, business people using finance, and management consultants) in 2008 and 2010, economist Faisal Khan noted that many Islamic bankers expressed 'skepticism' about the differences, or lack thereof, between traditional and Islamic banking products. He also noted a lack of external Sharia compliance audit requirements for Islamic banks in Pakistan, and that Sharia boards lacked awareness of their banks failing to follow Sharia-compliant practices or were unable to stop them. However, this did not stop devout people from using the banks (one person explained that if his Islamic bank was not truly following Sharia, 'the punishment is on their heads, not mine!'); I have done what I can do.
An estimate of customer preferences in the Pakistani banking industry (provided by a Pakistani banker) is that about 10% of customers are 'strictly traditional banking customers,' 20% are strictly Sharia-compliant banking customers, and 70% prefer Sharia-compliant banking but will use traditional banking if the 'price difference is significant.' A survey of Islamic and traditional banking customers found that Islamic banking customers were more observant (attending Hajj, performing namaz, keeping a beard, etc.), but they also had higher savings account balances than traditional banking customers, were older, better educated, traveled abroad more, and tended to open a second account at a traditional bank. Another study using 'official data' reported to the State Bank of Pakistan found that for lenders who received both Islamic (murabaha) financing and traditional loans, the default rate for traditional loans was more than twice that of the others. If the vote share of religious political parties increases, borrowers are 'less likely to default during Ramadan and in large cities, which suggests that religion—whether through personal piety or network effects—may play a role in determining loan defaults.'
As of 2016, the key challenges facing the Islamic finance industry, including Islamic bonds (sukuk), according to the 2015/16 State of the Global Islamic Economy Report and International Monetary Fund data, include:
Public awareness and understanding of Islamic financial products and services are low, which keeps people from using them.
There is a need to improve regulatory clarity and coordination, strengthen cooperation between Islamic and traditional financial standard-setters, and further improve regulatory tools. This is to address the complex financial products and company structures in some countries where regulatory frameworks fail to handle risks specific to the industry.
There is a scarcity of monetary policy tools that follow halal rules and a lack of understanding of monetary transmission mechanisms.
Underdeveloped safety nets and resolution frameworks. A lack of a complete Islamic deposit insurance system, where insurance premiums cannot be invested in halal assets, or a lack of a halal lender of last resort.
Regulators do not always have the ability or the will to ensure compliance with Islamic law.
Imitating traditional finance.
Some supporters of Islamic banking, such as Taqi Usmani, D. M. Qureshi, Saleh Abdullah Kamel, and Harris Irfan, and skeptics like Muhammad Akram Khan, Mohammad Omar Farooq, Feisal Khan, Mahmoud El-Gamal, and Timur Kuran, have studied the differences between Islamic and traditional banks and expressed regret over their similarities.
Taqi Usmani argues that Islamic banking has completely ignored its basic philosophy. First, it ignores the risk-sharing model (musharaka) between the financier and the user of funds, preferring fixed markup models like cost-plus financing (murabahah) and leasing (ijarah), which theoretically should only be used when risk-sharing is impractical. Second, it ignores the rules of cost-plus financing (murabahah) and leasing (ijarah) themselves. For example, it uses murabahah financing to borrow cash without even buying any goods in the process, or uses leasing (ijarah) where the lessor does not take responsibility for ownership or provide the lessee with any rights of use.
Interest rate benchmarks are used to set Islamic profit rates, so the net result is not substantially different from interest-based transactions. Ignoring these basic principles weakens the influence of Islamic banking among non-Muslims and especially the general public. Usmani believes the public now has the impression that Islamic banking is just a matter of swapping documents.
In March 2009, Usmani declared that 85% of Islamic bonds (sukuk) were non-Islamic. At the time, Usmani was the chairman of the Sharia board for the Accounting and Auditing Organization for Islamic Financial Institutions (AAOIFI), which sets standards for the global Islamic banking industry. Others, such as Hassan Heikal, have also criticized the authenticity of Islamic bonds.
Another pioneer of the Islamic banking industry, DM Qureshi, told a questioner at a 2005 Islamic banking conference, 'With all due respect, today's Islamic banking is a labeling industry.' Everything traditional is just given a new label, and then you call it Islamic.
Mohammad Najatuallah Siddiqui also criticized the trend of copying traditional interest-based financial tools and making minor changes to terms and phrases, such as using sukuk for bonds or tawarruq for loans. He said this trend gives Islamic finance a bad reputation. One Islamic bank, Lariba, even issued a fatwa from its Sharia board, which included famous Sheikh Yusuf al-Qaradawi, stating: 'We have reached a consensus that there is no objection to using the word interest to replace profit or rate of return.' Siddiqui stated that practitioners of Islamic finance are eager to prove in theory that their finance is different from traditional finance, but in reality:
They are busy finding ways to make them similar. Starting around the 1980s, Sharia advisors mainly focused on designing alternatives to financial products that were already familiar to the market while trying to keep them compliant with Sharia.
A Muslim banker at Deutsche Bank, Harris Irfan, wrote about how he felt when selling Islamic banking products that did not truly comply with Sharia. He complained that he felt like a fraud, suffering from incoherent pietism and cognitive dissonance while trying to fit a square peg into a round hole.
Muhammad Akram Khan, a senior expert in Islamic economics, criticized Islamic banks for claiming to build their business on something other than interest while designing a series of tricks and ruses to hide interest.
Mahmoud Amin El-Gamal and Mohammad Fadel complained that Islamic banks charge fees that are too high. Fadel described the foundation of the industry as charging fees to create financial products that seem to meet the formal requirements of Islamic law while keeping all the economic features of traditional products.
El-Gamal described modern Islamic finance as Sharia arbitrage, which means taking advantage of price differences between Islamic and traditional markets because devout Muslims are willing to pay extra for financing they believe follows Sharia. In this system, a bank's Sharia board earns fees by finding a suitable classical Arabic name for an Islamic-style product and using that name to justify the Islamic brand and make it seem more credible.
According to Sayyid Tahir:
There is no evidence that the arrangements of Islamic banks are based on any kind of Sharia foundation. For example, the formulas for legal liquidity requirements, capital adequacy, and risk management standards in Islamic banks are the same as those in interest-based banks.
According to AW Duskuki and Abdelazeem Abozaid, the only difference investigators might find between Islamic finance and traditional finance is
in technical details and legal form, but the substance is the same. In fact, Islamic bankers use the same financial calculations as other bankers to figure out the present and future value of investments. Therefore, in the end, skeptical Muslims and other critical outsiders will find that Islamic banks actually charge interest, just under a different name like commission or profit.
Saleh Abdullah Kamel, the 1997 winner of the IDB Islamic Banking Prize, has a different view. He pointed out that the industry only has most of the features of traditional banking.
The investment models favored by Islamic banks have turned into a mix of loans and investments. This hybrid model has most of the features of interest-based loans and the flaws of the Western capitalist system. It does not highlight the features of Islamic investment based on risk-sharing and actual investment. It does not recognize the guarantee of capital and its returns.
Another criticism of mimicking traditional banking (raised by Mahmoud El-Gamal) is that imitating the 'past returns and past trends' of traditional finance, such as seeking to be the first bank to offer an 'Islamic hedge fund,' can bring huge initial profit margins. This is because the imitator is a 'first mover' in the Islamic finance industry and has 'access to monopoly markets and free indirect publicity.' This tempts other banks to try to follow suit, but long-term returns are often limited.
Skeptics of the industry have offered several explanations for why they believe the industry has failed to provide a real alternative to traditional banking. According to MO Farooq, Sharia boards face pressure, and it is indeed difficult to review the institutions that pay their salaries, which is a modern version of the medieval 'court ulama'.
Feisal Khan argues that Islamic banking is caught in a 'vicious cycle' where traditional piety conflicts with feasibility. Inspired by the Islamic revival movement, a large number of pious Muslims seek to finance, invest, and save in ways that do not use interest and 'standard debt contracts'. Efforts to provide interest-free alternatives that truly comply with Sharia—'participatory' or 'profit and loss sharing' financing—have failed because, in most cases, information asymmetry between the financier and the recipient makes this financing model unprofitable. Large banks are unwilling to let this obstacle stop them from profiting from the vast market of pious Muslims, so they look for 'scholars willing to certify traditional instruments as Sharia-compliant' and give more business to the most helpful scholars. The result is a 'fairly wide' range of financial products and services that 'closely' mimic traditional products and services but come with Sharia certification, which adds extra transaction costs.
Another explanation given by Farooq, citing Muhammad Nejatullah Siddiqi, is the shortage of Sharia experts. Generally speaking, these experts have not received enough training in the intent or purpose of Islamic law, so they cannot evaluate the pros and cons of certain financial products. They also lack training in economics and cannot analyze the consequences of using complex financial transactions like tawarruq, which allows lenders to provide cash to borrowers in a way that complies with Islamic law but is more complex and costly than traditional loans.
Timur Kuran argues that the importance of the Islamic economic foundation in Islamic banking is that it is primarily a tool to reaffirm the primacy of Islam, and only secondarily a tool for radical economic change.
The promises and challenges of profit and risk sharing.
According to a 2006 paper by Suliman Hamdan Albalawi, at least in Saudi Arabia and Egypt, Islamic banks no longer use profit and loss sharing (PLS) techniques as a core principle, and Malaysia has also seen a decline.
A study on the most commonly used Islamic finance models found that PLS financing in major Islamic banks dropped from 17.34% in 1994-1996 to just 6.34% of total financing in 2000-2006. In the sample, debt-based contracts or debt-like instruments were more popular. During the 2004-2006 period, 54.42% of financing was based on murabaha, 16.31% on ijara, and 5.60% on salam and istisna. Another survey of the largest Islamic banks released in 2010 found that the use of PLS ranged between 0.5% and 21.6%.
Authors Humayon A. Dar and J. R. Presley explain why PLS tools, where the financier provides capital and partnership financing, have dropped to a negligible percentage, including:
Bank clients have a strong incentive to report less profit than they actually earn, because the higher the declared profit, the more money the client must pay to the financing bank. This puts banks at a disadvantage when using PLS compared to using fixed-income models.
Property rights are not clearly defined in most Muslim countries, which makes it hard to share profits and losses.
Islamic banks compete with traditional banks that have deep roots and hundreds of years of experience. Islamic banks are still unsure about their own policies and practices, so they avoid taking on risks they cannot predict.
Profit and Loss Sharing (PLS) is often not suitable or possible for things like short-term resource needs, working capital, or non-profit projects in education and health.
In some countries, interest is treated as a business expense and is tax-free, but profit is taxed as income. Because of this, business clients who get funding through PLS pay higher taxes than those who take out loans and pay interest.
At least as of 2001, there was no secondary market for Islamic financial products based on PLS.
As a form of PLS, profit-sharing partnership (mudaraba) gives bank shareholders limited control and leads to an unbalanced governance structure. Shareholders want a consistent and complementary control system, but profit-sharing partnership (mudaraba) financing lacks this.
The industry has not been able to get customers to accept the periodic losses (the L in PLS) that come with investments. The profit-sharing partnership (mudarabah) feature, where bank clients and investors share in the bank's losses, is thought to make Islamic financial institutions more stable than traditional banks. In its 2015 paper, Islamic Finance: Opportunities, Challenges, and Policy Options, the International Monetary Fund listed ensuring that profit-sharing investment accounts (PSIA), also known as profit-sharing partnership (mudarabah) accounts, are handled in a way that keeps the financial system stable as a major regulatory challenge. Supporters like Taqi Usmani argue that normal trade activities naturally lead to occasional losses. They believe that expecting stable returns without any risk of loss is an unnatural product of capitalist banking, caused by separating finance from normal trade. Over decades of development, Islamic banking has faced bad debts and even major financial difficulties, such as the significant corruption scandal at the Dubai Islamic Bank in 1998.
However, at least up until 2004, no Islamic bank had passed bad debts on to its depositors. No Islamic bank reduced the value of depositor accounts when writing down the value of bad assets for fear of losing those depositors.
Beyond the disadvantages for lenders, critic Feisal Khan argues that the widespread use of profit and loss sharing (PLS) could cause serious damage to the economy. He points out that if banks held direct equity in every business as required by profit-sharing contracts (mudarabah) and partnership contracts (musharakah), credit would shrink. Central banks would then be unable to use standard credit expansion methods, such as buying bonds or commercial paper, to prevent the liquidity crises that occur in modern economies. While purists like Usmani are correct that cost-plus financing (murabahah) and other fixed-income tools—which have already pushed out PLS—are essentially just another name for traditional banking, banning them in favor of more authentic profit and loss sharing might leave central banks unable to prevent economic contraction and extreme unemployment.
Besides ignoring profit and loss sharing in favor of cost-plus financing (murabahah), the industry is accused of failing to follow Islamic law rules for murabahah. It often fails to buy or sell the actual goods or inventory that are a key condition for compliance. Banks do this when they want to lend cash rather than fund a purchase, even though it adds extra costs without serving any other purpose. In 2008, Arabianbusiness.com complained that sometimes there were no goods at all, only cash flowing between banks, brokers, and borrowers. Often, the goods have nothing to do with the borrower's business, and there are not even enough existing goods in the world to account for all the transactions taking place. Two other researchers reported that billions of dollars in synthetic murabahah transactions have taken place in London over the years, with many people doubting whether the banks actually owned the deposits or even the underlying assets.
Early supporters of Islamic banking called for setting up different accounts for different types of deposits so that earnings could be distributed to each type. Critic Muhammad Akram Khan argues that, in reality, Islamic financial institutions pool all types of deposits together.
Critics complain that banks following Sharia rules often just take the word of the bank or the borrower that they are following compliance rules, without doing real audits to check if it is true. An observer (L. Al Nasser) complained that when dealing with peers in the industry, Sharia authorities show too much trust in their subjects. He said Sharia audits are needed to reach transparency and make sure institutions keep their promises to customers. Also, when doing outside Sharia audits, many auditors often complain about the high number of violations they see but cannot discuss because the records they check have been tampered with.
Illegal gains
Even though Islamic banks forbid charging interest, their profit margins are usually based on interest rates. Islamic banker Harris Irfan says there is no doubt that benchmarks like LIBOR are still necessary for Islamic banks, and most scholars accept this no matter how imperfect the solution seems. However, Muhammad Akram Khan wrote that following the traditional bank benchmark LIBOR goes against the original purpose of designing and offering Islamic financial products.
Skeptics also complain that the returns on Islamic bank accounts are very close to those of traditional banks, even though their different mechanisms should theoretically lead to different numbers. A 2014 study using the latest econometrics techniques looked at the long-term relationship between time deposit rates at traditional banks and participation banks (Islamic banks) in Turkey. It found that the time deposit rates of three out of four participation banks were significantly cointegrated with those of traditional banks, and the causal relationship between Islamic bank yields and traditional banks was permanent. Skeptics believe this closeness shows that Islamic banks manipulate their yields. These banks are often smaller and have weaker foundations, and they feel the need to reassure customers about their financial competitiveness and stability.
Liquidity issues
The Islamic banking and finance industry lacks a way to earn returns on money that is parked short-term while waiting for investment, which puts these banks at a disadvantage compared to traditional banks.
Banks and financial institutions must balance liquidity—the ability to quickly turn assets into cash or cash equivalents in an emergency without a big loss when depositors need it—with competitive rates of return on funds. Traditional banks use the interbank lending market to borrow money for liquidity needs and invest for any period, including very short terms, to boost their earnings. Calculating the return for any period is simple: just multiply the loan term by the interest rate.
However, the profit and loss sharing (PLS) model preferred in Islamic finance means profits can only be shared after the invested project is finished. Since you cannot determine profit or loss in the short term, money deposited for a short time does not earn any return. Islamic financial institutions cannot use traditional interbank lending markets for short-term borrowing.
Because there are few or not enough Islamic money market investment tools, as of 2002, the liquidity—or money without returns—held by Islamic banks was on average 40% higher than that of traditional banks. The Islamic Financial Services Board found that the daily volume of interbank transactions between Islamic financial institutions, between Islamic and traditional banks, and between Islamic financial institutions and central banks is very low compared to traditional money markets. While Muslim countries like Bahrain, Iran, Malaysia, and Sudan have started developing Islamic money markets and issuing securitized documents based on profit-sharing partnership (musharakah), profit-sharing investment (mudarabah), and leasing (ijarah), as of at least 2013, the lack of a proper and effective secondary market means these securities are much smaller in number than those in traditional capital markets.
Regarding non-PLS, or debt-based contracts, one study found that the business model of Islamic banks is changing over time and moving toward taking on more liquidity risk.
To solve the problem of money held for liquidity or lack of investment opportunities not earning a return, many Islamic financial institutions, such as the Islamic Development Bank and Faisal Islamic Bank of Egypt, openly earn interest from their excess funds, which are usually invested in safer debt-like or overseas debt instruments. Sharia experts do not forbid this practice, but instead provide the necessary religious rulings (fatwa) to comply with Sharia based on the rule of necessity (darurah). Researchers Frank Vogel and Frank Hayes write:
Islamic finance and banking scholars cite necessity to allow exceptions and relax rules. They issued fatwas allowing Islamic banks to deposit funds into interest-bearing accounts, especially abroad, because these banks have no other investments during periods of necessity. However, they usually attach conditions to such fatwas, such as requiring that illegal earnings be used for religious charitable purposes like charity, training, or research.
Lack of social responsibility
According to Islamic teachings, Islamic banks should adopt new financing policies and explore new investment channels to encourage development and improve the living standards of small-scale traders, but Taqi Usmani complains that few Islamic banks and financial institutions focus on this. Islamic scholar Mohammad Hashim Kamali regrets that Islamic banks focus on short-term financing, which mainly focuses on financing already produced goods rather than creating or increasing production capital or focusing on facilities like factories and infrastructure.
Muhammad Akram Khan also complains that in the process of merging with traditional banking, Islamic bank product development mimics traditional banking instead of building a different type of banking consistent with fair and equal income distribution and ethical investment models.
Another scholar, Mahmoud El-Gamal, also regrets that Islamic banks value form over substance and suggests rebranding Islamic finance to emphasize issues like community banking, microfinance, and socially responsible investment.
Criticisms from other unorthodox economists are even more intense.
Muhammad O. Farooq questions the basic premise of Islamic banking, arguing that it focuses on abolishing all interest at the expense of the big picture of pursuing overall economic justice, and cites the Quran's warning against the concentration of wealth:
Whatever Allah has restored to His Messenger from the people of the towns is for Allah and for the Messenger, and for the near relatives and the orphans and the needy and the wayfarer, so that it will not be a perpetual distribution among the rich from among you...
He questioned if greed and profit are bigger causes of exploitation than loan interest. He believes that in a competitive and regulated market, loan interest might not actually count as interest.
The Islamic banking and finance movement has adapted to political tyranny. It is supported by a small, wealthy class of rentiers in the Muslim world and is increasingly manipulated by global financial giants. Because of this, it is easily limited to just talking about opposing exploitation, and it might even unintentionally become a tool for exploitation itself. The real world is full of exploitation, such as child exploitation, sexual exploitation, and labor exploitation. Interest might only be a small part of global exploitation. However, supporters of Islamic economics and finance remain obsessed with interest.
He used the profit motive of the East India Company as an example. Before 1858, the company colonized and ruled India at the expense of the Muslim Mughal Empire, and its shares were equity rather than debt instruments. He found it curious that although books promoting Islamic banking and finance often claim that loan interest exploits the poor and Muslims, there is almost no empirical or focused research on exploitation or injustice within Islamic economics. For example, Farooq complained that in two important bibliographies on orthodox Islamic economics, there was not a single citation about exploitation or injustice. These were 'Muslim Economic Thought: A Survey of Contemporary Literature,' which had 700 entries under 51 subcategories across 115 pages, and 'Islamic Economics: Annotated Sources in English and Urdu' by Muhammad Akram Khan.
Timur Kuran complained that Islamic banks in Egypt and other Muslim countries follow Western banking practices and do little to help economic development or job creation. However, they do not follow the practices of Western venture capitalists, who have funded the global high-tech industry. Since the operating principles of venture capital are the same as profit and loss sharing, even though venture capital does not avoid haram (forbidden) products, using venture capital could bring huge benefits to Egypt and other poor Muslim countries seeking economic development.
Lack of uniformity in Sharia.
Most Islamic banks have their own Sharia boards to rule on bank policies. Researchers Frank Vogel and Frank Hayes believe the four schools of Sunni Islamic law (Madhhab) do not agree on Islamic banking practices. They apply Islamic teachings to business and finance in different ways. There are disagreements on specific points of religious law both between the four schools and within them. Also, Sharia boards sometimes change their minds and overturn previous decisions.
Ibrahim Warde asks if boards just rubber-stamp the banks that pay their salaries. Munawar Iqbal and Philip Molyneux say that disagreements between boards about what counts as Sharia-compliant can cause trouble, because customers might doubt if a bank is truly following the rules. If Islamic banks are not seen as truly Islamic, they will quickly lose most of their market.
Late payments and defaults.
In traditional finance, late payments or loan defaults are discouraged by interest that keeps adding up. Muhammad Akran Khan says that controlling and managing late accounts has become a thorny problem in Islamic finance. Although many suggestions have been made to fix the problem of overdue loans in Islamic banks, Ibrahim Warde says:
Islamic banks face serious issues with late payments, not to mention outright defaults, because some people use every legal and religious trick to delay. In most Islamic countries, various forms of fines and late fees have been set up, but they have been banned or found impossible to enforce. Late fees, in particular, have been treated the same as interest. Therefore, debtors know they can pay Islamic banks last because there is no cost for doing so.
Warde also complained:
Many business people who borrowed large amounts of money for a long time took advantage of the shift to Islamic finance. They paid back only the principal and wiped out the accumulated interest. Given the double-digit inflation over the years, this was usually a tiny amount.
How to deal with inflation
Inflation is also a problem for financing. Islamic banks do not copy traditional banks; they actually provide loans without interest or any other fees. Whether and how to compensate lenders for money that loses value due to inflation is a problem that "troubles" Islamic scholars. If lenders lose money by giving loans, businesses will not be able to get financing. Suggestions include indexing loans to inflation, which many scholars oppose because they think it is a form of interest and encourages inflation. Other ideas include measuring loans by commodities like gold, or doing more research to find an answer.
The influence of non-Muslims
Almost all, if not all, customers of Islamic banking and finance are Muslims. But most financial institutions that provide Islamic banking services are Western and owned by non-Muslims. Supporters of Islamic banking believe that the interest Western banks have in Islamic banking is proof of strong and growing market demand, and therefore an "achievement of the Islamic movement."
However, critics complain that these banks lack a deep commitment to the faith of Islamic banking, which means:
The Muslims hired at these institutions have almost no input into actual management. This leads the Muslim public to sometimes have well-founded doubts about how seriously these institutions follow Sharia law. A traditional Malaysian bank offering Islamic investment funds was found to have invested most of these funds in the gambling industry. The managers running these funds are not Muslim.
The interest from traditional banks does not show that Islamic banking is growing stronger. Instead, it shows how similar Islamic and traditional banks are, so the latter can enter the Islamic banking sector without making any real changes to their business. El-Gamal doubts whether the interest of large non-Muslim banks in Islamic finance comes from the profitability of Islamic financial business.
When the market hits a downturn, these banks are more likely to exit the industry. Harris Irfan believes that non-Muslim banks like Deutsche Bank lack an ideological commitment to Islamic banking, which has led and will continue to lead them to exit the industry when the market hits a downturn. In early 2011, during the bursting of the real estate bubble, Deutsche Bank did not keep a single dedicated Islamic structurer or salesperson. Islamic finance has become a luxury that banks cannot afford. Perhaps partly because of this, in February 2011, the Central Bank of Qatar ordered traditional lenders to close their Islamic operations in the country by the end of the year. The central bank insisted that it was too much for traditional banks to follow alternative capital adequacy rules for Islamic finance, and it was hard to supervise and monitor the Islamic and traditional operations of commercial banks because depositors' funds would get mixed together.
Stability/Risk
Opinions differ on whether Islamic banking is more stable and carries less risk than traditional banking.
Supporters, such as Bank Negara Malaysia Governor Zeti Akhtar Aziz, believe that Islamic financial institutions are more stable than traditional banks because they forbid speculation and, in theory, the two main types of Islamic bank accounts—current accounts and profit-sharing accounts (mudarabah)—pose less risk to the bank.
In a current account, customers do not earn any return, and there is theoretically no risk of loss because the bank does not invest the funds in the account.
In a profit-sharing investment account (mudaraba), an Islamic bank faces less risk from loan defaults because it shares this risk with the depositors. If a borrower cannot repay some or all of the money the bank lent them, the amount distributed to depositors decreases by the same amount. In a traditional bank, depositors receive fixed interest payments regardless of whether the bank's income drops due to loan defaults.
Critics complain that this stability comes at the cost of the stability of the account balances for depositors or partners—a term Islamic banks often use instead of customers or depositors—who face risks that those in traditional banks do not. a critic named Mahmoud A. El-Gamal argues:
In these institutions, investment account holders have neither the protection of creditors in an Islamic financial institution nor the protection of equity holders represented on the institution's board. This introduces many other well-documented risk factors to the institution.
On the other hand, Habib Ahmed wrote shortly after the 2009 financial crisis that the practice of Islamic finance has gradually moved closer to traditional finance, which exposes it to the same dangers of instability.
When looking at the practice of Islamic finance and its operating environment, one can find trends similar to those that led to the current crisis. Recently, stock and real estate markets in the Gulf region have also experienced speculative events. Finally, the Islamic finance industry has grown rapidly with the innovation of complex financial products that comply with Sharia law. The risks of these new Islamic financial products are complex because these tools involve multiple types of risk.
In any case, several Islamic banks have failed over the decades. In 1988, the Islamic investment company Ar-Ryan collapsed, causing thousands of small investors to lose their savings. Later, an anonymous donor from a Gulf country covered their losses. This was a heavy blow to Islamic finance at the time. In 1998, the management of Bank al Taqwa collapsed. Its annual report stated that depositors and shareholders lost more than 23% of their principal. It was later discovered that management violated bank rules by investing more than 60% of the bank's assets into a single project.
Turkey's Ihlas Finance House closed in 2001 due to liquidity problems and financial distress. Faisal Islamic Bank also ran into difficulties and closed its operations in the UK for regulatory reasons. According to The Economist magazine, the 2009 Dubai debt crisis showed that Islamic bonds could help inflate debt to unsustainable levels.
Economic recession
According to a 2010 survey by the International Monetary Fund, Islamic banks showed stronger resilience on average than conventional banks during the 2007 to 2008 financial crisis, but they faced greater losses when the crisis hit the real economy.
At the start of the 2007-2009 Great Recession, Islamic banks were unscathed. One supporter of Islamic banking wrote that the collapse of major Wall Street institutions, especially Lehman Brothers, should encourage economists worldwide to look at Islamic banking and finance as an alternative model. However, the impact of the financial recession gradually shifted to the real sector, affecting the Islamic banking industry. According to Ibrahim Warde, this shows that Islamic finance is not a panacea, and a faith-based system is not automatically immune to the unpredictability of the financial system.
Concentrated ownership
Munawar Iqbal and Philip Molyneux believe that concentrated ownership is another danger to the stability of the Islamic banking and finance industry. They wrote:
Three or four families own a large portion of the industry's shares. If anything happens to these families, or if the next generation of these families changes their priorities, this concentration of ownership could lead to serious financial instability and potentially cause the industry to collapse. Similarly, the experience of national-level trials is mostly based on the initiatives of non-elected rulers.
Macroeconomic risks
Harris Irafan warns that the macroeconomic risks of Islamic banking create a multi-billion dollar ticking time bomb of unhedged currency and interest rates. The difficulty, complexity, and cost of hedging these currencies and interest rates in a proper Islamic way are so high that as of 2015, the Islamic Development Bank was losing cash rapidly, as if it were funding a war. Without relying on conventional markets, it simply cannot consistently exchange dollars for euros or vice versa. Regional Islamic banks in the Middle East and Malaysia do not have trained professionals to understand and negotiate Sharia-compliant treasury swaps, nor are they willing to hire consultants with experience in this area.
High costs and low efficiency
Mohamed El-Gamal believes that because Islamic financial products mimic traditional ones but operate under Sharia rules, they require extra fees for jurists and lawyers, plus costs for multiple sales, special purpose vehicles, and ownership documentation. There are also costs linked to the special structures Islamic banks use for late payment penalties. Because of this, their financing costs are often higher than traditional products, while account returns are often lower.
El-Gamal also argues that another reason for the inefficiency and higher costs of Islamic banking, and why it always lags behind new financial products in the traditional industry, is the reliance on classical nominal contracts like cost-plus financing (murabaha) and leasing (ijara). These contracts follow classical texts written during a time when financial markets were very limited. They cannot untangle various risks, whereas modern financial markets and institutions like money markets, capital markets, and options markets are designed specifically to do that. On the other hand, improving the efficiency of these contracts or products alienates pious customers who believe they should follow classical forms.
In a major part of the financial market—home buying—Islamic finance could not compete with traditional finance in countries like the UK, Canada, and the US as of 2002 in the UK and 2009 in North America. According to Humayon Dar, the monthly payments for Sharia-compliant leasing contracts used by the Islamic investment banking division of Ahli United Bank in the UK were much higher than equivalent traditional mortgages. According to Hans Visser, the cost of Islamic home financing in Canada was 100 to 300 basis points higher than traditional financing, and 40 to 100 basis points higher in the United States. Visser believes Islamic loan financing costs more because Islamic loans have higher risk weights compared to traditional mortgages under international standards for minimum bank capital requirements set by Basel I and Basel II. In some cases, the Islamic profit rate is the same as a traditional mortgage rate, but the closing costs are several hundred dollars higher.
Reports by M. Kabir Hassan in 2005 and 2006 show that Islamic banks dominated by cost-plus financing (murabaha) are not very efficient. The banks studied had an average cost efficiency of 74% and an average profit efficiency of 84%. Although Islamic banks are less efficient at controlling costs, they are generally more efficient at generating profits. A later report on efficiency indicators like cost, allocation, technology, pure technology, and scale noted that, on average, the efficiency of the Islamic banking industry is relatively low compared to traditional banks in other parts of the world.
Other studies found that the efficiency of Islamic banks is, on average, slightly lower than traditional banks in non-Muslim majority regions, measured by bank revenue minus the profits paid to depositors.
This includes studies of Malaysian banks from 1997 to 2003 and Turkish Islamic banks between 1999 and 2001.
In contrast, a multi-country study covering a similar period from 1999 to 2005 found no significant difference in overall efficiency, according to a 2008 study that measured the cost, revenue, and profit efficiency of 43 Islamic banks and 37 traditional banks across 21 countries.
Common explanations for the flaws in the Islamic banking industry from the Islamic finance movement, as noted by M. O. Farooq, are:
Industry problems and challenges are part of a learning curve that will be solved over time.
Unless the industry operates within an Islamic society and environment, it will be hindered by non-Islamic influences and cannot operate according to its true nature.
While the truth of the second explanation cannot be verified until a complete Islamic society is established, Feisal Khan points out regarding the first defense that the industry has shown little evidence of progress since that argument was first made in 1993. That year, critic Timur Kuran highlighted problems in the industry, noting that Islamic banks are basically similar to traditional banks in practice, marginalizing equity-based, risk-sharing models while embracing short-term products and debt-like instruments, while supporter Ausaf Ahmad defended the industry by saying it was in the early stages of transitioning from traditional banking.
Seventeen years later, Islamic finance supporter Ibrahim Warde lamented that murabaha and similar sales products have not disappeared but have grown significantly, and today they make up the bulk of most Islamic banking business.
Most critics of Islamic banking call for more orthodoxy, doubling down on efforts to strictly enforce Sharia law. Some people, like M. O. Farooq and M. A. Khan, blame the industry's problems on treating loan interest as forbidden interest (riba) and the impracticality of trying to enforce that ban.
Finally, I am borrowing an article written by Talha Ahmed Iftikhar on his blog:
Not long ago, my friend wanted to buy furniture from a company that advertised that customers could use interest-free loans for up to 6 months provided by several banks to purchase their products. He decided to get this loan from an Islamic bank to stay compliant with Sharia, but he was shocked when the bank told him his invoice would increase by 30% because it included a profit margin. Then, the deal would be converted into a credit sale contract, and the amount would be paid back in installments over 6 months.
I asked the CEO how an Islamic bank could charge a 30% profit to someone who did not have the money to pay the full amount at once. Isn't this the strong exploiting the weak? Is this the same as the riba or usury that is condemned? His answer left me very confused: "We charge the same fees as the market." For those in need, we have a charity department. They call it a transaction. I left the meeting right away.
Murabaha is not a form of trade, but a banking product designed to trick Muslims into interest-based debt traps. Using it as an Islamic financing model must stop immediately, or at the very least, banks should be banned from using Islam to sell this product. Usury, or riba, is at the heart of an unfair economic system where the strong get stronger at the expense of the weak. Top officials at Islamic banks admit that this product hides the same interest rates used by other banks, which clearly shows these products will never help achieve social justice.
Muslim Knowledge Guide China: Loan Interest, Riba and Christian-Islamic Finance Ethics
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Summary: This Muslim knowledge guide compares Christian and Islamic debates over charging interest on loans, covering biblical arguments, church history, loan types, riba, bank interest, Muslim scholar opinions, and the wider question of finance ethics in daily life.
This article has two parts. The first part covers how Christian scholars view interest, and the second part covers how Muslim scholars view it. You will find that both religions have similar diverse conclusions on interest, but their followers took different paths. This depends on which clergy members have more influence.
Original Title
Is It Wrong to Charge Interest on a Loan?
Author: Kevin DeYoung, Professor of Systematic Theology at Reformed Theological Seminary and Senior Pastor at Christ Covenant Church.
Last week, I posted some content from the Westminster Larger Catechism related to economics. In a place where the doctrine forbids usury, I added a note about loan-sharks. This drew sharp criticism from commentators:
Kevin, you know very well that usury in the Bible and 17th-century church doctrine was not defined as loan-sharks. It was defined as charging any interest rate greater than zero. You are free to think the Bible is outdated and wrong on this point. But please have the courage to stand up and say you think the Bible is wrong. Do not redefine words in the Bible to mean something they do not, just so you can claim you believe in the Bible when you actually do not accept it.
These words are powerful. This gentleman claims that the Westminster clergy opposed charging any form of interest under any circumstances, and he insists that I am wrong and the Bible is wrong.
I removed the notes because I could see that the points I tried to make in parentheses should not be taken as the correct interpretation. My views need a more substantial explanation.
What is at stake here?
Before we discuss the accusation that interest is not biblical, let us first understand everything at stake in this discussion. We might think that making money from interest is a unique profession for bankers, Wall Street people, and other seemingly super-rich bad guys.
But charging interest on loans is what your credit card company does.
It is what the big stores do when you buy a refrigerator.
It is what car companies do when they let you drive a new car off the lot with almost no down payment.
It is what your mortgage company does to make home ownership possible. It is how the government issues student loans, and essentially, it is what you do when you deposit money into a bank or buy government bonds.
You let others use your money because they promise to keep it safe and return it to you with interest.
None of this proves that charging interest is allowed by religious law, but it does mean that people who use the Bible to oppose interest should be ready to oppose and give up almost every part of the modern economy.
A brief history of usury
For most of church history, Christians have opposed charging interest on most loans. This makes sense when you consider the Bible's prohibitions.
According to Leviticus (25:37), you must not lend your money to your brother. Exodus (22:25) states that if you lend money to any poor person among you, you cannot act like a moneylender toward him, nor can you charge him interest.
Deuteronomy (23:20) says the same thing about loans within the Israelite community, but it includes an important warning: you may charge interest to a foreigner. We can understand why charging interest was often opposed.
But it would be wrong to think the church always opposed interest on every type of loan. Usury has always been considered a sin, but not all interest-bearing loans were seen as usury. There is a long history of defining usury as loans for survival rather than loans for capital. Loans in the Old Testament were for those who were destitute and poor, which is the clear context for the passages mentioned above in Exodus and Leviticus. When someone in a covenant community hits rock bottom, the best approach is to give them what they need, followed by a loan. One thing you cannot do is give them an interest-bearing loan. This situation calls for charity, as it is not an opportunity to make money at the expense of someone else's misfortune.
However, loans made as business or investment risks have historically been viewed as a different type of loan. In his book Banking, Justice, and the Common Good, Samuel Gregg examines the history of usury and the church: 'It seems no one seriously objected to people lending money to others.' There is even quite a bit of evidence showing that clergy provided a form of 'banking service' to their peers. To be sure, throughout most of Christendom, the church forbade Christians from charging interest, which is why banking became a business dominated by Jewish people. They were permitted to charge interest on loans (Deuteronomy 23:20). Consequently, Jewish people were often accused of being 'moneylenders,' and their unique role in the financial industry became a contributing factor to centuries of antisemitism.
However, over time, Christians became more careful in how they defined usury. The Fifth Council of the Lateran (1512-17) defined usury as 'nothing other than gain or profit acquired from the use of a thing that is essentially barren, without labor, cost, or risk.'
This means that if a lender provides money with labor, cost, and risk involved, they can charge interest without committing the sin of usury. Similarly, Calvin also spoke about acceptable and unacceptable usury. Making money off the poor is one thing, but if we must do business with the rich, usury is allowed. He believes that besides the principal, high interest should be paid to the creditor to make up for his losses. In short, reason does not lead us to admit that all usury should be condemned without exception (Commentary on Exodus).
Similarly, Ursinus points out in his Commentary on the Heidelberg Catechism that all fair contracts, including paying rent, fair compensation for any loss, partnerships, and purchases, are exempt from being called usury. In other words, not every kind of interest is usury. Some are, and some are not. It depends on whether the loan helps the borrower or is most likely to harm them. Ursinus wrote that there are many questions about usury, and we can judge them based on the rule set by Christ: do to others what you would have them do to you.
Given this history of the Christian church, especially the Reformed churches, it is unlikely that Westminster Theological Seminary would condemn every type of interest-bearing loan. What has been condemned—and will continue to be—is predatory lending. There is no doubt that some people in the financial industry have committed sins in their lending practices, and just because we cannot say every loan is usury does not mean that nothing is usury. For example, in many poorer communities, you will find institutions that charge astronomical interest rates to provide people with cash advances. Given the risks involved, are these higher interest rates reasonable? Or is this exactly the usury that Christians have always condemned—squeezing the last penny from the poor and driving them into bankruptcy? In the book The Ascent of Money, Niall Ferguson argues that the early days of banking were made up of such usurers, which is why I used the phrase in parentheses last week.
Conclusion
For most of human history, charging interest on loans has been controversial, as Jay Richards explains:
By modern standards, almost everyone was poor, and only a very few rich people had money to lend. So, any loan would involve a rich person lending to their poor neighbors, who might be their relatives, to meet basic needs like food. People hid their extra money away, so while a person might have the right to ask for their money back, charging a poor person a fee for the temporary use of money that would otherwise just gather dust seems immoral. Charging huge interest rates that cannot be repaid only makes things worse, because it takes advantage of a person's misfortune and ignorance. Therefore, given the historical context and the belief that money should not be valued above all else, banning usury makes sense. (Money, Greed, and Allah, page 140).
So, has the church changed its view on usury? No, but its definition has become more precise. Usury is not charging interest on a loan to offset the risk of the loan and the cost of giving up other uses for the money; it is unfairly charging fees on a loan by taking advantage of someone when they are in trouble. Considering the context of Old Testament provisions, this seems like a fair distinction.
I do not believe the Bible or the Westminster Confession forbids charging any interest under any circumstances. This is not the universal position of the church. Instead, it teaches that it is wrong to charge interest based on the issuance of a loan, rather than as a basis for providing fair compensation based on factors related to the loan. Bad banks, bad lenders, and bad loans still exist, but neither the Bible nor church tradition requires us to think that banks, lenders, and loans are bad simply because they are banks, lenders, and loans.
The following are the views of Muslim scholars, taken from the book Islamic Finance and Banking System:
Saleh argues that interest-related activities occurred while the Prophet was still in Mecca, at a time when there were very few Jews there. most Jews in Medina at that time were engaged in agriculture rather than commerce, and those who engaged in interest-based transactions were among the Emigrants (Muhajirun) and the Helpers (Ansar). O you who believe! Do not consume interest, doubled and multiplied, but fear Allah that you may succeed. (3:130) The prohibition above was revealed during the Battle of Uhud. The funds for the Battle of Uhud were raised through interest. Abdullah ibn Salam said that interest practices were widespread in Medina, and this happened after the Prophet passed away.
Shaltut (1974) argued that the Quran only forbids excessive interest. To him, it is the 'doubled and multiplied interest' that Allah condemns. The term for interest (riba) that existed before the founding of Islam did not mean turning 100 into 200, but referred to the different ages of camels.
Syeikh Muhammad Abduh was the Mufti of Egypt. In the December 1903 issue of Al-Manar magazine, he published a statement: 'Prescribed usury is not allowed under any circumstances. However, the post office does not view the funds it collects from people as loans for profit. Under the principle of safekeeping, these funds can be used.' (Homoud, 1985, p.122)
Jawish (1908) suggested that the interest mentioned in the Quran refers to interest on delayed payments that has multiplied, not interest on loans.
Redha (1929) believed that a person could borrow 100 dollars and sign a check for 120 dollars, and this practice is absolutely not interest. Interest arising from deferred payment only occurs when the due date of a debt is extended.
Maruf Dawalibi believed that reasonable interest rates should be allowed for production loans. Scholar Syeikh Abdul Jalil Isa also supported this view. At the 1951 International Congress of Comparative Law in Paris, Dawalibi said: 'The forbidden usury refers to usury on consumer loans, not production loans. Usurers exploit the needs of the poor in the former and make them poorer by imposing excessive usury on them.' Now that economic systems are established and many companies have been formed, most loans are issued for production rather than consumption. As civilization develops, it is necessary to consider how these legal provisions should be improved. (Homoud 1985 p.120)
Syeikh Tantawi published a fatwa in the newspaper Al-Ahram stating that interest from investment certificates issued by the National Bank of Egypt (Al-Ahli Bank) is not illegal.
Syeikh Tantawi issued two more legal rulings in November 1989 and 1991, declaring that bank interest is permissible under Islamic law. (Al-Zuhayli, 2003)
In a 2004 study on Indonesian views toward interest, Antonio surveyed 45 influential scholars. Among them, 24 believed that interest paid or charged by banks is not illegal. They argued that interest is only forbidden if it harms the recipient, and only excessive interest should be called usury. Scholars who supported the legality of interest included Ibrahim Hosen, former Indonesian President Abdurrahman Wahid, and Hasan Basri.
These are the views of Muslim scholars who support the legality of interest. In contrast, opposition to interest is represented by Al-Azhar University. At its second annual conference in 1965, the university resolved that any form of interest is illegal. Given the poor state of Egyptian society in modern times and my own observations while visiting Al-Azhar, the Egyptian people have not gained a better life because of the university's presence. In fact, their lives have become harder. Therefore, any statement issued by Al-Azhar holds no authority for me and is for reference only.
We often say the root of the modern Islamic world's backwardness is that we do not follow the teachings of the Quran, but it is worth thinking deeply about exactly where we went wrong. Banks play a decisive role in the development of modern civilization, and where there are banks, there is interest. You cannot imagine someone living in society today without using a commercial bank. Even Islamic banks, which claim not to charge interest on loans, collect fees from borrowers under other names. Otherwise, why would a bank lend you money for free? Even those internet preachers who talk big about how one can live in this world without touching interest still need to use commercial bank accounts to receive donations from their followers.
I found some inspiration while looking into Christian views on lotteries and gambling. Christianity clearly opposes gambling, but they have a different explanation for lotteries, which work on similar principles. The Nanjing Union Theological Seminary believes that lotteries with a public welfare nature are acceptable, while gambling-like lotteries such as the Mark Six (liuhecai) should not be bought. It depends on the motivation and the consequences. However, some Islamic scholars take a one-size-fits-all approach to the same issue. They not only forbid any lottery behavior similar to gambling but even ban games like chess because they suspect gambling. This makes me worry about our future.
Although I do not believe Islam restricts the development of civilization, we must admit that some outdated rulings keep some people in a backward position. On the surface, some rulings seem like minor details, but in reality, they deprive people of the ability to think. If you do not allow people to try and fail, you cannot have innovation.
Finally, I have a question I would like to sincerely ask the scholars: Have you ever thought about whether the zakat, where Muslims give one-fortieth (2.5%) of their surplus wealth every year, counts as interest demanded by Allah from the believers? view all
Summary: This Muslim knowledge guide compares Christian and Islamic debates over charging interest on loans, covering biblical arguments, church history, loan types, riba, bank interest, Muslim scholar opinions, and the wider question of finance ethics in daily life.
This article has two parts. The first part covers how Christian scholars view interest, and the second part covers how Muslim scholars view it. You will find that both religions have similar diverse conclusions on interest, but their followers took different paths. This depends on which clergy members have more influence.
Original Title
Is It Wrong to Charge Interest on a Loan?
Author: Kevin DeYoung, Professor of Systematic Theology at Reformed Theological Seminary and Senior Pastor at Christ Covenant Church.
Last week, I posted some content from the Westminster Larger Catechism related to economics. In a place where the doctrine forbids usury, I added a note about loan-sharks. This drew sharp criticism from commentators:
Kevin, you know very well that usury in the Bible and 17th-century church doctrine was not defined as loan-sharks. It was defined as charging any interest rate greater than zero. You are free to think the Bible is outdated and wrong on this point. But please have the courage to stand up and say you think the Bible is wrong. Do not redefine words in the Bible to mean something they do not, just so you can claim you believe in the Bible when you actually do not accept it.
These words are powerful. This gentleman claims that the Westminster clergy opposed charging any form of interest under any circumstances, and he insists that I am wrong and the Bible is wrong.
I removed the notes because I could see that the points I tried to make in parentheses should not be taken as the correct interpretation. My views need a more substantial explanation.
What is at stake here?
Before we discuss the accusation that interest is not biblical, let us first understand everything at stake in this discussion. We might think that making money from interest is a unique profession for bankers, Wall Street people, and other seemingly super-rich bad guys.
But charging interest on loans is what your credit card company does.
It is what the big stores do when you buy a refrigerator.
It is what car companies do when they let you drive a new car off the lot with almost no down payment.
It is what your mortgage company does to make home ownership possible. It is how the government issues student loans, and essentially, it is what you do when you deposit money into a bank or buy government bonds.
You let others use your money because they promise to keep it safe and return it to you with interest.
None of this proves that charging interest is allowed by religious law, but it does mean that people who use the Bible to oppose interest should be ready to oppose and give up almost every part of the modern economy.
A brief history of usury
For most of church history, Christians have opposed charging interest on most loans. This makes sense when you consider the Bible's prohibitions.
According to Leviticus (25:37), you must not lend your money to your brother. Exodus (22:25) states that if you lend money to any poor person among you, you cannot act like a moneylender toward him, nor can you charge him interest.
Deuteronomy (23:20) says the same thing about loans within the Israelite community, but it includes an important warning: you may charge interest to a foreigner. We can understand why charging interest was often opposed.
But it would be wrong to think the church always opposed interest on every type of loan. Usury has always been considered a sin, but not all interest-bearing loans were seen as usury. There is a long history of defining usury as loans for survival rather than loans for capital. Loans in the Old Testament were for those who were destitute and poor, which is the clear context for the passages mentioned above in Exodus and Leviticus. When someone in a covenant community hits rock bottom, the best approach is to give them what they need, followed by a loan. One thing you cannot do is give them an interest-bearing loan. This situation calls for charity, as it is not an opportunity to make money at the expense of someone else's misfortune.
However, loans made as business or investment risks have historically been viewed as a different type of loan. In his book Banking, Justice, and the Common Good, Samuel Gregg examines the history of usury and the church: 'It seems no one seriously objected to people lending money to others.' There is even quite a bit of evidence showing that clergy provided a form of 'banking service' to their peers. To be sure, throughout most of Christendom, the church forbade Christians from charging interest, which is why banking became a business dominated by Jewish people. They were permitted to charge interest on loans (Deuteronomy 23:20). Consequently, Jewish people were often accused of being 'moneylenders,' and their unique role in the financial industry became a contributing factor to centuries of antisemitism.
However, over time, Christians became more careful in how they defined usury. The Fifth Council of the Lateran (1512-17) defined usury as 'nothing other than gain or profit acquired from the use of a thing that is essentially barren, without labor, cost, or risk.'
This means that if a lender provides money with labor, cost, and risk involved, they can charge interest without committing the sin of usury. Similarly, Calvin also spoke about acceptable and unacceptable usury. Making money off the poor is one thing, but if we must do business with the rich, usury is allowed. He believes that besides the principal, high interest should be paid to the creditor to make up for his losses. In short, reason does not lead us to admit that all usury should be condemned without exception (Commentary on Exodus).
Similarly, Ursinus points out in his Commentary on the Heidelberg Catechism that all fair contracts, including paying rent, fair compensation for any loss, partnerships, and purchases, are exempt from being called usury. In other words, not every kind of interest is usury. Some are, and some are not. It depends on whether the loan helps the borrower or is most likely to harm them. Ursinus wrote that there are many questions about usury, and we can judge them based on the rule set by Christ: do to others what you would have them do to you.
Given this history of the Christian church, especially the Reformed churches, it is unlikely that Westminster Theological Seminary would condemn every type of interest-bearing loan. What has been condemned—and will continue to be—is predatory lending. There is no doubt that some people in the financial industry have committed sins in their lending practices, and just because we cannot say every loan is usury does not mean that nothing is usury. For example, in many poorer communities, you will find institutions that charge astronomical interest rates to provide people with cash advances. Given the risks involved, are these higher interest rates reasonable? Or is this exactly the usury that Christians have always condemned—squeezing the last penny from the poor and driving them into bankruptcy? In the book The Ascent of Money, Niall Ferguson argues that the early days of banking were made up of such usurers, which is why I used the phrase in parentheses last week.
Conclusion
For most of human history, charging interest on loans has been controversial, as Jay Richards explains:
By modern standards, almost everyone was poor, and only a very few rich people had money to lend. So, any loan would involve a rich person lending to their poor neighbors, who might be their relatives, to meet basic needs like food. People hid their extra money away, so while a person might have the right to ask for their money back, charging a poor person a fee for the temporary use of money that would otherwise just gather dust seems immoral. Charging huge interest rates that cannot be repaid only makes things worse, because it takes advantage of a person's misfortune and ignorance. Therefore, given the historical context and the belief that money should not be valued above all else, banning usury makes sense. (Money, Greed, and Allah, page 140).
So, has the church changed its view on usury? No, but its definition has become more precise. Usury is not charging interest on a loan to offset the risk of the loan and the cost of giving up other uses for the money; it is unfairly charging fees on a loan by taking advantage of someone when they are in trouble. Considering the context of Old Testament provisions, this seems like a fair distinction.
I do not believe the Bible or the Westminster Confession forbids charging any interest under any circumstances. This is not the universal position of the church. Instead, it teaches that it is wrong to charge interest based on the issuance of a loan, rather than as a basis for providing fair compensation based on factors related to the loan. Bad banks, bad lenders, and bad loans still exist, but neither the Bible nor church tradition requires us to think that banks, lenders, and loans are bad simply because they are banks, lenders, and loans.
The following are the views of Muslim scholars, taken from the book Islamic Finance and Banking System:
Saleh argues that interest-related activities occurred while the Prophet was still in Mecca, at a time when there were very few Jews there. most Jews in Medina at that time were engaged in agriculture rather than commerce, and those who engaged in interest-based transactions were among the Emigrants (Muhajirun) and the Helpers (Ansar). O you who believe! Do not consume interest, doubled and multiplied, but fear Allah that you may succeed. (3:130) The prohibition above was revealed during the Battle of Uhud. The funds for the Battle of Uhud were raised through interest. Abdullah ibn Salam said that interest practices were widespread in Medina, and this happened after the Prophet passed away.
Shaltut (1974) argued that the Quran only forbids excessive interest. To him, it is the 'doubled and multiplied interest' that Allah condemns. The term for interest (riba) that existed before the founding of Islam did not mean turning 100 into 200, but referred to the different ages of camels.
Syeikh Muhammad Abduh was the Mufti of Egypt. In the December 1903 issue of Al-Manar magazine, he published a statement: 'Prescribed usury is not allowed under any circumstances. However, the post office does not view the funds it collects from people as loans for profit. Under the principle of safekeeping, these funds can be used.' (Homoud, 1985, p.122)
Jawish (1908) suggested that the interest mentioned in the Quran refers to interest on delayed payments that has multiplied, not interest on loans.
Redha (1929) believed that a person could borrow 100 dollars and sign a check for 120 dollars, and this practice is absolutely not interest. Interest arising from deferred payment only occurs when the due date of a debt is extended.
Maruf Dawalibi believed that reasonable interest rates should be allowed for production loans. Scholar Syeikh Abdul Jalil Isa also supported this view. At the 1951 International Congress of Comparative Law in Paris, Dawalibi said: 'The forbidden usury refers to usury on consumer loans, not production loans. Usurers exploit the needs of the poor in the former and make them poorer by imposing excessive usury on them.' Now that economic systems are established and many companies have been formed, most loans are issued for production rather than consumption. As civilization develops, it is necessary to consider how these legal provisions should be improved. (Homoud 1985 p.120)
Syeikh Tantawi published a fatwa in the newspaper Al-Ahram stating that interest from investment certificates issued by the National Bank of Egypt (Al-Ahli Bank) is not illegal.
Syeikh Tantawi issued two more legal rulings in November 1989 and 1991, declaring that bank interest is permissible under Islamic law. (Al-Zuhayli, 2003)
In a 2004 study on Indonesian views toward interest, Antonio surveyed 45 influential scholars. Among them, 24 believed that interest paid or charged by banks is not illegal. They argued that interest is only forbidden if it harms the recipient, and only excessive interest should be called usury. Scholars who supported the legality of interest included Ibrahim Hosen, former Indonesian President Abdurrahman Wahid, and Hasan Basri.
These are the views of Muslim scholars who support the legality of interest. In contrast, opposition to interest is represented by Al-Azhar University. At its second annual conference in 1965, the university resolved that any form of interest is illegal. Given the poor state of Egyptian society in modern times and my own observations while visiting Al-Azhar, the Egyptian people have not gained a better life because of the university's presence. In fact, their lives have become harder. Therefore, any statement issued by Al-Azhar holds no authority for me and is for reference only.
We often say the root of the modern Islamic world's backwardness is that we do not follow the teachings of the Quran, but it is worth thinking deeply about exactly where we went wrong. Banks play a decisive role in the development of modern civilization, and where there are banks, there is interest. You cannot imagine someone living in society today without using a commercial bank. Even Islamic banks, which claim not to charge interest on loans, collect fees from borrowers under other names. Otherwise, why would a bank lend you money for free? Even those internet preachers who talk big about how one can live in this world without touching interest still need to use commercial bank accounts to receive donations from their followers.
I found some inspiration while looking into Christian views on lotteries and gambling. Christianity clearly opposes gambling, but they have a different explanation for lotteries, which work on similar principles. The Nanjing Union Theological Seminary believes that lotteries with a public welfare nature are acceptable, while gambling-like lotteries such as the Mark Six (liuhecai) should not be bought. It depends on the motivation and the consequences. However, some Islamic scholars take a one-size-fits-all approach to the same issue. They not only forbid any lottery behavior similar to gambling but even ban games like chess because they suspect gambling. This makes me worry about our future.
Although I do not believe Islam restricts the development of civilization, we must admit that some outdated rulings keep some people in a backward position. On the surface, some rulings seem like minor details, but in reality, they deprive people of the ability to think. If you do not allow people to try and fail, you cannot have innovation.
Finally, I have a question I would like to sincerely ask the scholars: Have you ever thought about whether the zakat, where Muslims give one-fortieth (2.5%) of their surplus wealth every year, counts as interest demanded by Allah from the believers?
Muslim Knowledge Guide China: Is Car Insurance or a Mortgage Halal? Riba and Islamic Insurance Ethics
Articles • yusuf908 posted the article • 0 comments • 8 views • 18 hours ago
Summary: This Islamic finance article translates Ibrahim Khan’s discussion on car insurance and mortgage loans, explaining riba, necessity, transaction responsibility, and Sharia reasoning in plain English.
This is my translation of the third article in Ibrahim Khan's series on the Islamic law of insurance. The first article discussed the basic legal principles of insurance: Ibrahim Khan: Is Insurance Halal? The second article specifically discussed the unique nature of life insurance within insurance categories: Ibrahim Khan: Is Life Insurance Halal? Although this third article is titled Car Insurance, the reasoning method explained in the text applies to all financial fields. It is not limited to car insurance or home mortgage loans; it applies to any financial area involving interest or other unlawful gains.
Before starting the main text, I will briefly summarize the main point in plain language: when we trade with others, as long as the transaction itself is legal, it does not matter to us if the person we are trading with turns around and does something illegal. It is just like how we cannot refuse to let non-Muslims eat at a halal restaurant.
Is Car Insurance Equivalent to a Riba-Based Mortgage?
Author: Ibrahim Khan
Translated by Yahya
About the author: Ibrahim Khan holds a bachelor's degree in Philosophy, Politics, and Economics from the University of Oxford and a master's degree in Islamic Finance from the Al Salam Institute. He previously worked as a private equity/venture capital lawyer in New York City and is a co-founder of Islamic Finance Guru.
In a seminar I recently attended with Shaykh Akram Nadwi, the discussion turned to the Islamic stance on conventional mortgage loans. Shaykh Akram argued that he now agrees with Shaykh al-Qaradawi's famous fatwa on mortgages, which states that if long-term renting is not feasible for a family, they are permitted to apply for a conventional mortgage.
In this blog post, I do not want to discuss the specific situations where long-term renting is not possible, as I have discussed that before. I want to discuss some interesting arguments used by Shaykh Akram Nadwi that inspired me. This first set of arguments is:
1. Someone cannot rent long-term and needs to buy a house now;
2. Islamic mortgages are just a form of conventional mortgages;
3. To buy a house, someone must apply for a mortgage;
4. Therefore, someone can obtain a conventional mortgage that includes interest because it is necessary—just as car insurance is permitted because it is also necessary.
I want to focus on point 4 for further analysis.
Shaykh Akram Nadwi points out that the nature of a home mortgage is not consistent with car insurance. Buying car insurance is a necessary condition for driving a car, but a home mortgage is not a necessary condition for buying a house, even though buying a house is sometimes considered a necessity.
Some very important points
Because there are many positions on these issues, this argument is an important deciding factor for which camp you join. The second set of arguments:
1. Some say that conventional mortgages and car insurance are allowed based on life needs (for example, Sh. Akram and Sh. Suhaib Hasan).
2. Some say traditional mortgages are haram, but car insurance is allowed due to necessity (most Muslim scholars, such as the AlQalam Shariah Panel and Sh. Wahba
Zuhayli).
3. Some say both traditional mortgages and car insurance are haram (I do not know who).
4. Some say traditional mortgages are halal, but car insurance is haram (I do not know who).
So, which of these two sets of views is actually correct?
The argument for allowing car insurance is that people need cars to get around in the UK, since we cannot be expected to use public transport and taxis all the time. Therefore, we need to buy insurance for legal reasons, and under Islamic law, we are also permitted to buy car insurance.
Sheikh Akram Nadwi and some others argue that no one forces us to buy car insurance since we could walk or take public transport, so it is not strictly necessary. Likewise, we do not have to buy a house because we can just rent, so that is not strictly required either. The problem is that living without a car or a house is very difficult today, so is it appropriate for us to live that way? The second group believes car insurance is halal while mortgages are haram, but Sheikh Akram Nadwi and some scholars believe both are halal.
Let us discuss this further.
The second group might argue that because a rented property is exactly the same as a property bought with a mortgage, you would not face any major hardship if you kept renting. Public transport or taxis are very different from owning your own car, so it is difficult to get around if you have to rely on them all the time.
I think this is a good point, especially outside city centers like London. Once we talk about London, the benefits of public transport or taxis are not as clear because of the constant availability of taxis, Uber, and tube stations, plus the usual hassles of owning a car like parking and traffic jams. Even in a place like London, people still end up using cars for good reasons. They are convenient, and a woman traveling to her mother's house at night is much safer in her own car than in a taxi. These two options are still very different.
A second point the second group could make is that every form of transport in the UK must legally have some level of insurance, whether it is public transport or a taxi. Since you cannot avoid supporting insurance indirectly anyway, you might as well buy insurance for your own car. However, not every house in the UK has a mortgage. The one you happen to rent might have one, but that is not always the case. So, renting is not necessarily tied to a standard mortgage, while any type of public transport, taxi, or your own car involves insurance. This is another difference between mortgages and car insurance, and it explains why some people think mortgages are not halal, while car insurance is.
To me, this is not a new idea. In Islamic law, the business practices of a landlord, taxi driver, bus company, or subway operator generally do not concern you. You are just doing business with them, just like you would with shops like Tesco or Lidl. No one can suddenly claim that shopping at these places is haram just because the owners do something that is not permitted in Islam. In both cases, your transaction is completely halal, whether you are renting a property or paying for a transport service. I feel the same logic applies to car insurance and mortgages, as there is no fundamental difference between them.
Conclusion
The first group of scholars makes a solid point that conventional mortgages and car insurance should be allowed due to necessity in some cases, since they are similar. However, for the reasons discussed above, I think their argument is wrong, so the second group is more convincing to me.
It is important to remember that the first group of scholars was pushed toward allowing conventional mortgages because they believe Islamic mortgages are the same as or even worse than traditional ones. Therefore, to them, there is no real Islamic mortgage alternative other than leasing. However, many scholars in the second group are happy to declare that traditional mortgages are haram because there are other viable alternatives besides leasing, such as Islamic mortgages, which we will discuss in another article.
Of course, there is another school of thought: those who believe all insurance is fine, not because it is necessary, but because of the nature of insurance itself, but we will discuss that another time. view all
Summary: This Islamic finance article translates Ibrahim Khan’s discussion on car insurance and mortgage loans, explaining riba, necessity, transaction responsibility, and Sharia reasoning in plain English.
This is my translation of the third article in Ibrahim Khan's series on the Islamic law of insurance. The first article discussed the basic legal principles of insurance: Ibrahim Khan: Is Insurance Halal? The second article specifically discussed the unique nature of life insurance within insurance categories: Ibrahim Khan: Is Life Insurance Halal? Although this third article is titled Car Insurance, the reasoning method explained in the text applies to all financial fields. It is not limited to car insurance or home mortgage loans; it applies to any financial area involving interest or other unlawful gains.
Before starting the main text, I will briefly summarize the main point in plain language: when we trade with others, as long as the transaction itself is legal, it does not matter to us if the person we are trading with turns around and does something illegal. It is just like how we cannot refuse to let non-Muslims eat at a halal restaurant.
Is Car Insurance Equivalent to a Riba-Based Mortgage?
Author: Ibrahim Khan
Translated by Yahya
About the author: Ibrahim Khan holds a bachelor's degree in Philosophy, Politics, and Economics from the University of Oxford and a master's degree in Islamic Finance from the Al Salam Institute. He previously worked as a private equity/venture capital lawyer in New York City and is a co-founder of Islamic Finance Guru.
In a seminar I recently attended with Shaykh Akram Nadwi, the discussion turned to the Islamic stance on conventional mortgage loans. Shaykh Akram argued that he now agrees with Shaykh al-Qaradawi's famous fatwa on mortgages, which states that if long-term renting is not feasible for a family, they are permitted to apply for a conventional mortgage.
In this blog post, I do not want to discuss the specific situations where long-term renting is not possible, as I have discussed that before. I want to discuss some interesting arguments used by Shaykh Akram Nadwi that inspired me. This first set of arguments is:
1. Someone cannot rent long-term and needs to buy a house now;
2. Islamic mortgages are just a form of conventional mortgages;
3. To buy a house, someone must apply for a mortgage;
4. Therefore, someone can obtain a conventional mortgage that includes interest because it is necessary—just as car insurance is permitted because it is also necessary.
I want to focus on point 4 for further analysis.
Shaykh Akram Nadwi points out that the nature of a home mortgage is not consistent with car insurance. Buying car insurance is a necessary condition for driving a car, but a home mortgage is not a necessary condition for buying a house, even though buying a house is sometimes considered a necessity.
Some very important points
Because there are many positions on these issues, this argument is an important deciding factor for which camp you join. The second set of arguments:
1. Some say that conventional mortgages and car insurance are allowed based on life needs (for example, Sh. Akram and Sh. Suhaib Hasan).
2. Some say traditional mortgages are haram, but car insurance is allowed due to necessity (most Muslim scholars, such as the AlQalam Shariah Panel and Sh. Wahba
Zuhayli).
3. Some say both traditional mortgages and car insurance are haram (I do not know who).
4. Some say traditional mortgages are halal, but car insurance is haram (I do not know who).
So, which of these two sets of views is actually correct?
The argument for allowing car insurance is that people need cars to get around in the UK, since we cannot be expected to use public transport and taxis all the time. Therefore, we need to buy insurance for legal reasons, and under Islamic law, we are also permitted to buy car insurance.
Sheikh Akram Nadwi and some others argue that no one forces us to buy car insurance since we could walk or take public transport, so it is not strictly necessary. Likewise, we do not have to buy a house because we can just rent, so that is not strictly required either. The problem is that living without a car or a house is very difficult today, so is it appropriate for us to live that way? The second group believes car insurance is halal while mortgages are haram, but Sheikh Akram Nadwi and some scholars believe both are halal.
Let us discuss this further.
The second group might argue that because a rented property is exactly the same as a property bought with a mortgage, you would not face any major hardship if you kept renting. Public transport or taxis are very different from owning your own car, so it is difficult to get around if you have to rely on them all the time.
I think this is a good point, especially outside city centers like London. Once we talk about London, the benefits of public transport or taxis are not as clear because of the constant availability of taxis, Uber, and tube stations, plus the usual hassles of owning a car like parking and traffic jams. Even in a place like London, people still end up using cars for good reasons. They are convenient, and a woman traveling to her mother's house at night is much safer in her own car than in a taxi. These two options are still very different.
A second point the second group could make is that every form of transport in the UK must legally have some level of insurance, whether it is public transport or a taxi. Since you cannot avoid supporting insurance indirectly anyway, you might as well buy insurance for your own car. However, not every house in the UK has a mortgage. The one you happen to rent might have one, but that is not always the case. So, renting is not necessarily tied to a standard mortgage, while any type of public transport, taxi, or your own car involves insurance. This is another difference between mortgages and car insurance, and it explains why some people think mortgages are not halal, while car insurance is.
To me, this is not a new idea. In Islamic law, the business practices of a landlord, taxi driver, bus company, or subway operator generally do not concern you. You are just doing business with them, just like you would with shops like Tesco or Lidl. No one can suddenly claim that shopping at these places is haram just because the owners do something that is not permitted in Islam. In both cases, your transaction is completely halal, whether you are renting a property or paying for a transport service. I feel the same logic applies to car insurance and mortgages, as there is no fundamental difference between them.
Conclusion
The first group of scholars makes a solid point that conventional mortgages and car insurance should be allowed due to necessity in some cases, since they are similar. However, for the reasons discussed above, I think their argument is wrong, so the second group is more convincing to me.
It is important to remember that the first group of scholars was pushed toward allowing conventional mortgages because they believe Islamic mortgages are the same as or even worse than traditional ones. Therefore, to them, there is no real Islamic mortgage alternative other than leasing. However, many scholars in the second group are happy to declare that traditional mortgages are haram because there are other viable alternatives besides leasing, such as Islamic mortgages, which we will discuss in another article.
Of course, there is another school of thought: those who believe all insurance is fine, not because it is necessary, but because of the nature of insurance itself, but we will discuss that another time.
Muslim Knowledge Guide China: Is Life Insurance Halal? Term Life, Whole Life and Takaful Explained
Articles • yusuf908 posted the article • 0 comments • 11 views • 18 hours ago
Summary: This Islamic finance article explains Ibrahim Khan’s view on whether life insurance is halal, comparing term life insurance, whole life insurance, investment elements, and takaful-style alternatives in clear English.
Not long ago, I translated a Sharia article about insurance by Ibrahim Khan published on Islamic Finance Guru (www.islamicfinanceguru.com): Ibrahim Khan: Insurance—Is it halal? This was a selection of Sharia viewpoints discussing insurance from a macro perspective. Ibrahim Khan believes that the vast majority of insurance is lawful, but one more complex category requires separate discussion: life insurance.
The form of life insurance in our country is basically the same as abroad, divided into term life insurance and whole life insurance. The design principles of these two types of life insurance are slightly different. Because whole life insurance has a savings and value-added function, it is suspected of involving interest, and interest is prohibited by Sharia. This article will analyze in depth whether life insurance complies with Sharia based on its design principles.
Life Insurance: is it haram or halal?
(Life Insurance: Is it halal?)
Author: Ibrahim Khan
Translated by Yahya
About the author: Ibrahim Khan holds a bachelor's degree in Philosophy, Politics, and Economics from the University of Oxford and a master's degree in Islamic Finance from the Al Salam Institute. He previously worked as a private equity/venture capital lawyer in New York City and is a co-founder of Islamic Finance Guru.
Main text: In my previous article, "Ibrahim Khan: Insurance—Is it halal?" I discussed some of the main arguments for why insurance is lawful from a Sharia perspective. However, at the end of that article, I promised to write a follow-up article about "life insurance"
because I noticed that life insurance is different from commonly understood insurance products. To prevent misunderstandings, I need to elaborate further.
Well, please read on.
In short, life insurance is divided into two main categories. One is life insurance used for protection, and the other is used as an investment and financial management tool. The former is undoubtedly lawful (based on all the arguments put forward in the previous article), while the latter is only allowed to be purchased if the underlying investment is lawful.
The image shows a poster for Bupa Middle East, a world-class high-end medical insurance brand.
Types of life insurance
There are many types of life insurance, but fundamentally, they all fall into one of the following two areas.
1. Term life insurance
Term life insurance is a type of protection insurance. Under the terms of a term life policy, if you die within a set period, the insurance company pays a benefit to your family. For example, if you are 25 years old and buy a policy for 10 pounds a month, it promises to pay your family 100,000 pounds if you pass away before you turn 50. Here is what happens:
a) Either you pass away before age 50 and your family gets 100,000 pounds; or,
b) You live past age 50 and the policy ends. The insurance company simply keeps the 3,000 pounds in premiums you paid up to that point, just like they keep your annual car insurance premiums.
2. Whole life insurance
Whole life insurance combines protection insurance with an investment tool. Again, imagine you buy a whole life policy at age 25 for 100 pounds a month, and you will have paid at least 35,000 pounds in premiums by age 50. If you pass away before age 50, the insurance company pays a 35,000 pound benefit to your family. But if you live longer and earn good investment returns, you could receive a payout of over 50,000 pounds by the time you are 50.
Besides thinking about how to leave an inheritance for your loved ones after you pass away, you should also consider organizing your Islamic will. People often lose up to 9,700 pounds to inheritance tax when they die without a will. More importantly, a will is vital for Muslims so that your estate is distributed according to Islamic law. If you live in the UK, be sure to check the Islamic Finance Guru (IFG) website for guidance on wills and get your Islamic will sorted in 30 minutes.
Islamic perspective: Term life insurance clearly fits with all other types of protection insurance discussed in previous articles. The uncertainty prohibited in Hadith is not the same as the uncertainty involved in modern insurance. The many positive aspects of insurance outweigh the negative ones. If we accept that Muslim insurance follows Islamic law, we must admit that traditional insurance also follows it, because there is almost no real difference between the two. However, there may be unique objections to life insurance that do not apply to other types of insurance, so let us analyze if these arguments are convincing.
One specific argument against life insurance is that it differs from other types because it aims to provide coverage for the loss of life and the livelihood of the family after a person dies.
Ibrahim said: My Lord is the One who gives life and causes death. [Quran 2:258]
He gave you life, then He will cause you to die, and then He will bring you back to life. [Quran 22:66]
Do not kill your children for fear of poverty, for I provide for them and for you. [17:31]
Umar said: I heard the Messenger of Allah (may Allah bless him and grant him peace) say: If you rely on Allah as you should, He will provide for you just as He provides for the birds. They go out hungry in the early morning and return full in the evening. [Tirmidhi Hadith]
Opponents argue that buying life insurance goes against the decree of Allah, because Allah specifically mentions that life and livelihood are things we should not worry about, as everything is in His control. But this argument is weak, and I have a clear rebuttal: Allah says He controls life and death and provides food, but He does not want us all to sit idle or avoid taking any precautions. Do not throw yourselves into destruction... [Quran 2:195]
Anas ibn Malik said: A man from the Ansar came to the Prophet, and the Prophet (may Allah bless him and grant him peace) said: Do you have nothing in your house? The man said: Yes, I only have a piece of cloth, part of which I wear and part of which I spread on the ground, and a wooden bowl for drinking water. The Prophet said: Bring them to me. The man brought these things to him, and the Prophet held them in his hand and said, 'Who will buy these?' Someone said, 'I will buy them for one coin.' The Prophet asked two or three more times, 'Who will offer more than one coin?' Someone said, 'I will buy them for two coins.' He sold them for two coins and the Prophet said, 'Use one coin to buy food for your family.' Then buy an axe and bring it to me. The man brought it to him. The Prophet fixed a handle on it with his own hands and said, 'Go gather firewood and sell it, and do not let me see you for two weeks.' The man went to gather firewood and sold it. He earned ten coins and used them to buy clothes and food. The Prophet said, 'This is better for you than begging, as begging will be a stain on your face on the Day of Resurrection.' Begging is only allowed for three types of people: those in extreme poverty, those burdened with heavy debt, and those who must pay a high price. [Sunan Abu Dawood]
Abdullah ibn Umar (may Allah be pleased with him and his father) reported that the Prophet (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him) said, 'Any Muslim who has property to bequeath should not let two nights pass without writing a will.' (Sahih al-Bukhari) Islam teaches us to take all necessary precautions to care for our families, even after we die. In fact, Islam forbids leaving more than one-third of an estate to anyone outside of the deceased's immediate family.
Arguments against this are based on the same reasoning that all other types of protective insurance are not allowed, claiming that because Allah is the 'Healer' of the earth and the 'Protector' of the believers, one should not buy medical insurance. Following this view, one should not go to the hospital or take medicine either. Another reason people oppose life insurance is that Allah controls life and death, so Islam does not allow us to trade with it. I have two direct counterarguments: (1) In life insurance, we are not buying or selling our lives, but rather reducing the risk of financial loss from death. Also, Allah says in the Quran: Allah has purchased from the believers their lives and their properties in exchange for Paradise. [Quran 9:111]
Clearly, we do have a certain level of ownership over our lives. To that extent, we can use our lives and bodies in ways we choose.
If you think I missed any major objections to life insurance, I would love to hear your further arguments (leave a comment below the article).
Islamic perspective: Whole life insurance is fine in principle, but in practice, most people living in the West face a problem. Whole life insurance is seen as an investment in the West, and the legitimacy of an investment depends on the underlying assets.
In the Middle East, if you choose to work with a Muslim insurance company, that company is restricted by its internal policies to only invest in Sharia-compliant assets, so this is not a problem.
However, in the UK, the issue is a bit tricky because traditional insurance companies will almost certainly put a large amount of premiums into fixed-income (interest-based) products, but we may have two ways to handle this:
(1) Either get a policy where a person can decide which underlying investments the policy invests in (and then choose all Sharia-compliant assets); or (2) a person chooses an investment product where most underlying assets are Sharia-compliant, and then gives away the non-Sharia-compliant portion to charity. I am not a big fan of the latter option because whole life insurance is certainly not a necessity like a pension, so Muslims can still find other Sharia-compliant investment products as alternatives.
Conclusion
I feel the arguments above are already very clear, so I will not repeat them here. In short, if you are considering life insurance, check whether it is term insurance or whole life insurance. If it is term insurance, my view is that it is okay to buy. If it is whole life insurance, my view is that if you can choose Sharia-compliant investments, that is also fine, but in reality, this can be difficult in the West.
I think we at IFG should look deeper in the coming months at what long-term investment options follow halal rules. Insha Allah, we will soon start a series of reviews on various companies, funds, and startups that claim to be halal, and we have actually already started doing this.
Is it better to remove the non-halal parts from investment returns and keep the rest? Does this count as avoiding responsibility?
I look forward to your feedback in the comments. view all
Summary: This Islamic finance article explains Ibrahim Khan’s view on whether life insurance is halal, comparing term life insurance, whole life insurance, investment elements, and takaful-style alternatives in clear English.

Not long ago, I translated a Sharia article about insurance by Ibrahim Khan published on Islamic Finance Guru (www.islamicfinanceguru.com): Ibrahim Khan: Insurance—Is it halal? This was a selection of Sharia viewpoints discussing insurance from a macro perspective. Ibrahim Khan believes that the vast majority of insurance is lawful, but one more complex category requires separate discussion: life insurance.
The form of life insurance in our country is basically the same as abroad, divided into term life insurance and whole life insurance. The design principles of these two types of life insurance are slightly different. Because whole life insurance has a savings and value-added function, it is suspected of involving interest, and interest is prohibited by Sharia. This article will analyze in depth whether life insurance complies with Sharia based on its design principles.
Life Insurance: is it haram or halal?
(Life Insurance: Is it halal?)
Author: Ibrahim Khan
Translated by Yahya
About the author: Ibrahim Khan holds a bachelor's degree in Philosophy, Politics, and Economics from the University of Oxford and a master's degree in Islamic Finance from the Al Salam Institute. He previously worked as a private equity/venture capital lawyer in New York City and is a co-founder of Islamic Finance Guru.
Main text: In my previous article, "Ibrahim Khan: Insurance—Is it halal?" I discussed some of the main arguments for why insurance is lawful from a Sharia perspective. However, at the end of that article, I promised to write a follow-up article about "life insurance"
because I noticed that life insurance is different from commonly understood insurance products. To prevent misunderstandings, I need to elaborate further.
Well, please read on.
In short, life insurance is divided into two main categories. One is life insurance used for protection, and the other is used as an investment and financial management tool. The former is undoubtedly lawful (based on all the arguments put forward in the previous article), while the latter is only allowed to be purchased if the underlying investment is lawful.

The image shows a poster for Bupa Middle East, a world-class high-end medical insurance brand.
Types of life insurance
There are many types of life insurance, but fundamentally, they all fall into one of the following two areas.
1. Term life insurance
Term life insurance is a type of protection insurance. Under the terms of a term life policy, if you die within a set period, the insurance company pays a benefit to your family. For example, if you are 25 years old and buy a policy for 10 pounds a month, it promises to pay your family 100,000 pounds if you pass away before you turn 50. Here is what happens:
a) Either you pass away before age 50 and your family gets 100,000 pounds; or,
b) You live past age 50 and the policy ends. The insurance company simply keeps the 3,000 pounds in premiums you paid up to that point, just like they keep your annual car insurance premiums.
2. Whole life insurance
Whole life insurance combines protection insurance with an investment tool. Again, imagine you buy a whole life policy at age 25 for 100 pounds a month, and you will have paid at least 35,000 pounds in premiums by age 50. If you pass away before age 50, the insurance company pays a 35,000 pound benefit to your family. But if you live longer and earn good investment returns, you could receive a payout of over 50,000 pounds by the time you are 50.

Besides thinking about how to leave an inheritance for your loved ones after you pass away, you should also consider organizing your Islamic will. People often lose up to 9,700 pounds to inheritance tax when they die without a will. More importantly, a will is vital for Muslims so that your estate is distributed according to Islamic law. If you live in the UK, be sure to check the Islamic Finance Guru (IFG) website for guidance on wills and get your Islamic will sorted in 30 minutes.

Islamic perspective: Term life insurance clearly fits with all other types of protection insurance discussed in previous articles. The uncertainty prohibited in Hadith is not the same as the uncertainty involved in modern insurance. The many positive aspects of insurance outweigh the negative ones. If we accept that Muslim insurance follows Islamic law, we must admit that traditional insurance also follows it, because there is almost no real difference between the two. However, there may be unique objections to life insurance that do not apply to other types of insurance, so let us analyze if these arguments are convincing.
One specific argument against life insurance is that it differs from other types because it aims to provide coverage for the loss of life and the livelihood of the family after a person dies.
Ibrahim said: My Lord is the One who gives life and causes death. [Quran 2:258]
He gave you life, then He will cause you to die, and then He will bring you back to life. [Quran 22:66]
Do not kill your children for fear of poverty, for I provide for them and for you. [17:31]
Umar said: I heard the Messenger of Allah (may Allah bless him and grant him peace) say: If you rely on Allah as you should, He will provide for you just as He provides for the birds. They go out hungry in the early morning and return full in the evening. [Tirmidhi Hadith]
Opponents argue that buying life insurance goes against the decree of Allah, because Allah specifically mentions that life and livelihood are things we should not worry about, as everything is in His control. But this argument is weak, and I have a clear rebuttal: Allah says He controls life and death and provides food, but He does not want us all to sit idle or avoid taking any precautions. Do not throw yourselves into destruction... [Quran 2:195]
Anas ibn Malik said: A man from the Ansar came to the Prophet, and the Prophet (may Allah bless him and grant him peace) said: Do you have nothing in your house? The man said: Yes, I only have a piece of cloth, part of which I wear and part of which I spread on the ground, and a wooden bowl for drinking water. The Prophet said: Bring them to me. The man brought these things to him, and the Prophet held them in his hand and said, 'Who will buy these?' Someone said, 'I will buy them for one coin.' The Prophet asked two or three more times, 'Who will offer more than one coin?' Someone said, 'I will buy them for two coins.' He sold them for two coins and the Prophet said, 'Use one coin to buy food for your family.' Then buy an axe and bring it to me. The man brought it to him. The Prophet fixed a handle on it with his own hands and said, 'Go gather firewood and sell it, and do not let me see you for two weeks.' The man went to gather firewood and sold it. He earned ten coins and used them to buy clothes and food. The Prophet said, 'This is better for you than begging, as begging will be a stain on your face on the Day of Resurrection.' Begging is only allowed for three types of people: those in extreme poverty, those burdened with heavy debt, and those who must pay a high price. [Sunan Abu Dawood]
Abdullah ibn Umar (may Allah be pleased with him and his father) reported that the Prophet (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him) said, 'Any Muslim who has property to bequeath should not let two nights pass without writing a will.' (Sahih al-Bukhari) Islam teaches us to take all necessary precautions to care for our families, even after we die. In fact, Islam forbids leaving more than one-third of an estate to anyone outside of the deceased's immediate family.
Arguments against this are based on the same reasoning that all other types of protective insurance are not allowed, claiming that because Allah is the 'Healer' of the earth and the 'Protector' of the believers, one should not buy medical insurance. Following this view, one should not go to the hospital or take medicine either. Another reason people oppose life insurance is that Allah controls life and death, so Islam does not allow us to trade with it. I have two direct counterarguments: (1) In life insurance, we are not buying or selling our lives, but rather reducing the risk of financial loss from death. Also, Allah says in the Quran: Allah has purchased from the believers their lives and their properties in exchange for Paradise. [Quran 9:111]
Clearly, we do have a certain level of ownership over our lives. To that extent, we can use our lives and bodies in ways we choose.
If you think I missed any major objections to life insurance, I would love to hear your further arguments (leave a comment below the article).

Islamic perspective: Whole life insurance is fine in principle, but in practice, most people living in the West face a problem. Whole life insurance is seen as an investment in the West, and the legitimacy of an investment depends on the underlying assets.
In the Middle East, if you choose to work with a Muslim insurance company, that company is restricted by its internal policies to only invest in Sharia-compliant assets, so this is not a problem.
However, in the UK, the issue is a bit tricky because traditional insurance companies will almost certainly put a large amount of premiums into fixed-income (interest-based) products, but we may have two ways to handle this:
(1) Either get a policy where a person can decide which underlying investments the policy invests in (and then choose all Sharia-compliant assets); or (2) a person chooses an investment product where most underlying assets are Sharia-compliant, and then gives away the non-Sharia-compliant portion to charity. I am not a big fan of the latter option because whole life insurance is certainly not a necessity like a pension, so Muslims can still find other Sharia-compliant investment products as alternatives.
Conclusion
I feel the arguments above are already very clear, so I will not repeat them here. In short, if you are considering life insurance, check whether it is term insurance or whole life insurance. If it is term insurance, my view is that it is okay to buy. If it is whole life insurance, my view is that if you can choose Sharia-compliant investments, that is also fine, but in reality, this can be difficult in the West.
I think we at IFG should look deeper in the coming months at what long-term investment options follow halal rules. Insha Allah, we will soon start a series of reviews on various companies, funds, and startups that claim to be halal, and we have actually already started doing this.
Is it better to remove the non-halal parts from investment returns and keep the rest? Does this count as avoiding responsibility?
I look forward to your feedback in the comments.
Muslim Knowledge Guide China: Is Insurance Halal or Haram? Takaful, Riba and Gharar Explained
Articles • yusuf908 posted the article • 0 comments • 9 views • 19 hours ago
Summary: Muslim Knowledge Guide China: Is Insurance Halal or Haram? Takaful, Riba and Gharar Explained is presented here as a clear English Islamic finance essay for Muslim readers, starting with this scene: I translated this article today from the Islamic Finance Guru website . The original is in English. Interestingly, many of the points in the article match what I have written before, and I swear I had never read this piece until now. It keeps the original names, numbers, mosque details, food notes, photographs, and cultural context while focusing on Islamic Finance, Takaful, Halal Insurance.
I translated this article today from the Islamic Finance Guru website . The original is in English. Interestingly, many of the points in the article match what I have written before, and I swear I had never read this piece until now.
In today's world, there are countless sheikhs who are experts in scripture, and many elites who are good at finance. However, it is rare to find a scholar who understands both. This makes it hard for many jurists to make accurate judgments on new, cutting-edge issues. The author of this article, Ibrahim Khan, has both a background in financial theory and practical experience. He holds a bachelor's degree in philosophy, politics, and economics from Oxford University and worked as a private equity and venture capital lawyer in New York City. He also has a solid education in scripture, holding a degree in Islamic studies from the Al Salam Institute and a master's degree in Islamic finance. He is a rare talent in the field of contemporary Islamic finance.
Insurance: Is it Haram or Halal?
(Insurance: Is it halal?)
Author: Ibrahim Khan
Translator: Yehya
Main text:
I suspect this is the most controversial article to appear on IFG. Why do I say that? Most of my views on Islamic finance align with the mainstream, but as I have researched the insurance industry more deeply, I have found myself changing some of my ideas. Here are my preliminary views. I believe most types of insurance should be considered permissible (compliant with Sharia).
I would also add, perhaps you do not realize, that a minority of scholars, both living and deceased, believe insurance is compliant with Sharia. Although the view that insurance is forbidden is common, the view that it is permissible is not new. These scholars who believe insurance is permissible include Sheikh Mustafa Zarqa, Sheikh Ali Al-Khafeef, and Nejatullah Siddiqi. There are also some quite prominent modern scholars, but I have not held academic discussions with them. If they feel it is necessary, they can state their own views.
Basic premise
The basic premise I want everyone to remember is that Islamic Sharia does allow us to use forms of financing to help those who suffer losses due to unknown risks. Traditionally, in the Arab region, if someone in a tribe needed to pay blood money (a large sum of money), everyone in the tribe would contribute a small amount to make up that large sum. They did this as an act of charity, so that none of their members would be crushed by a huge compensation payment. Related to this is halal insurance, a form of mutual aid that I will explain in detail later. For now, remember that pooling wealth to reduce loss is a completely legitimate act. The debate focuses on how it operates and the conditions and framework under which it is conducted.
Uncertainty (gharar)
Arguments against traditional insurance claim it involves interest (riba), uncertainty (gharar), and gambling (maisir). In this article, I will focus on the strongest and most central of these objections: uncertainty.
For this article, let us define insurance as common types like car, home, pet, medical, and business insurance, rather than more complex products like life insurance or reinsurance.
The traditional view holds that Islam forbids uncertain transactions. In insurance, you do not know when a risk will occur after buying a policy. Most people pay premiums without getting a return, so it is considered impermissible because you are unsure if you will ever have an accident.
On the other hand, halal insurance or mutual insurance is allowed because it is fundamentally compensation for loss. Although it looks like traditional insurance, it is actually a good deed. The compensation received might be more or less than the actual loss, similar to how tribal members pool money to pay blood money (diya) for someone, which is considered a virtuous act.
After studying the argument that traditional insurance is illegal due to uncertainty, I concluded that it is not the type of uncertain transaction the Hadith intended to forbid. Let me tell you why.
Hadith involving uncertain transactions:
Sahih Muslim records: Abu Hurairah reported that the Messenger of Allah (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him) forbade speculative sales (bai al-gharar).
Jami` at-Tirmidhi records that the Prophet said: Do not sell what you do not have.
Sahih al-Bukhari and Sahih Muslim record: Ibn Umar reported that the Messenger of Allah (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him) forbade the sale of fruit until it is ripe and free from disease.
Musnad Ahmad and Sunan Ibn Majah record: The Prophet forbade buying an unborn animal in its mother's womb, selling milk in the udder without weighing it in a container, buying war booty before it is distributed, giving charity before receiving the booty, and buying the catch of a diver.
Musnad Ahmad records: The Prophet forbade buying a runaway slave.
Ibn al-Athir al-Ansari records: The Prophet forbade selling fruit before it is ripe.
Sahih al-Bukhari and Sahih Muslim record: The Messenger of Allah allowed the transaction of 'Araya (gifting a date palm to someone, who can then trade the fresh dates on the tree for dried dates by estimation) for amounts less than 5 awsaq (about 653 kilograms), meaning it is allowed to sell fresh dates on the tree in exchange for old dried dates.
Aisha reported: I said, O Messenger of Allah, people borrow bread and yeast from their neighbors and return more or less than what they borrowed. Is this allowed? He said: This does no harm. This is the normal state for people, and they do not want increases or decreases. (Mentioned in Financial Transactions in Islamic Jurisprudence by Zuhayli, page 254). Another narration from Muadh ibn Jabal says: Take the larger and give the smaller, or take the smaller and give the larger; the best among you is the one who is best at repaying debts.
Sahih Muslim records that Ibn Abbas (may Allah be pleased with them) reported that when the Prophet of Allah (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him) came to Medina, they were paying in advance for fruit for one or two years, so he said: Whoever pays in advance must do so for a specified weight and a determined time.
From (1) we can see, as we have already discussed, that transactions with uncertainty are forbidden. But from hadiths (2)-(6) we can analyze why this is done: in each of these cases, the goal is to have a clear, definite contract that leaves no room for dispute, and secondly, the reason for the prohibition is that the harm of the transaction is greater than its benefit.
My view is that traditional insurance is not such a contract because it is clear enough.
Let us look at hadiths (7)-(9): these are just some hadiths where the Prophet allowed some uncertainty in contracts to make things easier for people and merchants, or because it is a custom of the people, and the benefits of the transaction outweigh the harms.
Therefore, we can clearly see that Islam does support some uncertainty in money matters. Thus, the benefits and trading customs of traditional insurance are enough to make it analogous, rather than a forbidden form of uncertainty.
Finally, I find that when people examine the rulings on modern transactions, these are seen as involving a degree of uncertainty, and it is hard for people to define exactly how these rulings, which are seen as legal like Islamic insurance, differ from traditional insurance which is seen as illegal.
Arguments for the negative
The fundamental issue is whether what is bought in an insurance contract is tangible and certain enough to make the contract valid. The Prophet forbade a person from buying a diver's catch until he actually received the catch, returned, and began selling the tangible fish, because it was not clear what was being bought or sold. The subject of the contract must be certain.
But let us imagine the modern era, where big data and historical statistics allow us to model average catches very accurately. In this case, I think there is no problem for Tesco, for example, to sign a one-year contract with a fishing company to provide whatever it catches, as the quantity of the catch is predictable based on known historical averages.
In the insurance industry, insurance companies use big data to gain certainty about their revenue. The question is, do consumers get that same level of certainty? In a competitive market, this helps companies price the product they sell to customers: safety or peace of mind.
Safety or peace of mind might sound like intangible goals. Think of a security guard who gets paid to provide safety. What does that look like? He stands there waiting for the one day a year he is needed, and he stays on call the rest of the time. His job is not just waiting, but also handling any other requests the client might have. Similarly, insurance companies sign contracts, have agents talk to you, provide documents when you need them, and investigate when you file a claim. They are not asked to pay claims every day, but they provide clear and practical services.
A property manager who arranges services for a landlord is another example. If a property needs repairs, the manager handles them. A law firm hired to handle legal requirements is another. Both the property manager and the law firm want to profit from the deal. This is similar to a car or home insurance contract, where the insurance company covers the cost of any damage or theft that might happen.
In short, insurance is a clear contract in our time.
A positive view
Insurance provides certainty, which is important for the business world and for people's daily lives. The Prophet specifically allowed bai salam (letting farmers sell their crops in advance so they can raise money now) because it truly helps people live more easily. As seen in Hadith 9, he weighed the uncertainty of the trade against the benefits and decided the benefits were greater.
I also find the charm in Hadith 7 and 8. They do not apply perfectly here, but they show that unequal exchanges in business deals are sometimes acceptable. In the case of 7, it helps ease business in an area where date palms are the main crop. In the case of 8, it allows for the repayment of debt in a flexible way. Usually, a person must repay a debt exactly, without even adding a gift, to avoid it being seen as interest. However, in this case, maintaining community unity is more important than anything else.
Notice how the Prophet set a simple standard for what is allowed in 7. 650 kilograms is a large measurement, and the Prophet allowed araya trades for amounts less than that. For example, he could have set the weight at 10 kilograms, but his intention was to make business and life easier, not to create difficulties.
Insurance is vital for businesses to maintain steady shipping every month and prevent crises. It also helps help large deals because insurance companies often participate by underwriting the risk of failed transactions or acting as guarantors for all parties. These are all important lubricants for our economy. insurance creates a large amount of wealth, which is then invested throughout society—this is also an important part of a healthy economy.
Insurance has many other benefits, and this article outlines some of them well. In short, the focus is on insurance. While it may have a degree of uncertainty, it is still reasonable because it has great benefits, and our Sharia historically does allow for some beneficial uncertain transactions if the pros outweigh the cons.
Arguments for Muslim insurance.
The concept of blood money mutual aid (diya) is the inspiration for the Muslim insurance models proposed in our time. The basic concept is that a group of people pools their money together, not for profit, but to support each other. I like the cooperative model, and if such a model exists nearby, I would be happy to encourage people to use it—essentially, it is more like a charitable public welfare cause.
But fundamentally, the Muslim insurance model is the same as the traditional model in its important structural elements. The goal of both organizations is to create a surplus, pay the salaries of employees and managers, pool the participants' cash, and then pay claims with that cash. In the Muslim insurance model, there is also a mutual benefit element similar to an exchange contract. It is not just about donating money and ending it there; rather, there is an expectation when donating that the Muslim insurance pool will provide dividends if the donor is in need.
Secondly, if we go back to the blood money situation that Muslim insurance is often compared to, the money was not actually pooled and then invested by the tribe. When disaster struck, the individual tribe would still pay the price, so in a way, this is a purer form of gift (hiba) because there was no contract between the tribes. However, in today's non-tribal and atomized society, this is impractical, so the Muslim insurance model allows people to receive payments in advance. This certainly creates an expectation—and that expectation is profit. So my point is that the Muslim insurance industry has already compromised on the pure blood money setup for practical purposes. Doing so makes it almost identical to traditional insurance companies. If this is acknowledged, then there is actually almost no other substantive difference between the two models.
Yes, the traditional model can be said to be more profit-driven, does not pay any dividends to participants, and charges higher fees. But in reality, from the perspective of the 21st century, we live in a world of free capital flow. International finance and financial institutions span multiple continents, and the population size is incomparable to that of a thousand years ago. We need large-scale Muslim insurance companies to function, and that requires incredible effort. It is unrealistic to expect anyone to handle all this without a profit motive, and existing Muslim insurance companies are also for-profit. The main insurance providers are those who set them up and fund them through Islamic windows—essentially the only entities that can help start a Muslim insurance company—and they will make money from it just like traditional insurance businesses. The only difference is the structure, but the profit motive is exactly the same. They price risks and solve funding shortages just like traditional insurance companies, although in a pure Muslim insurance model, dividends might be distributed based on how much a person contributes because it is a charity, and if there is a loss, other members share it.
Finally, the Cooperative company in the UK is a great model; I learned more about them and actually participated in projects during my research, and they return profits to members and offer discounts in their stores. Interestingly, they performed very poorly before they became commercialized, but after commercialization, they now run very efficiently.
Concluding remarks
This is the longest article I have published on IFG because I need to elaborate more on the arguments presented, as this is a minority position. Please note that this article is just a summary of my views. A more comprehensive analysis would extend to tens of thousands of words. For example, every hadith mentioned has had countless pages written about it over the centuries, and fully analyzing them would require a small book, not to mention all the other relevant hadith that were not mentioned.
A few final points need to be briefly emphasized.
In my view, the legitimacy of Muslim insurance and traditional insurance is almost identical, except for the following points.
Insurance companies invest in haram areas, and if you get a certain return at the end, such as with life insurance, I need to think about this further, but at first glance, the same ruling applies to any fund stock you invest in that has haram components.
In cases where you buy insurance related to property loss, such as car insurance, rather than for any investment motive, I initially think there is no problem because you are signing a contract with the insurance company, and you do not need to worry about what they do with the money.
Life insurance may have special problems compared to other types of insurance, and I cannot comment on this until further research.
Regarding mandatory insurance like car insurance or employer liability insurance, this is certainly fine from the perspective of Sharia, even if all my arguments above are wrong.
Also, as I said at the beginning, my thinking on this topic is still maturing as I research it more deeply. I really want to hear what others think about what is written here, including your ideas and criticisms, so we can learn more from each other.
More resources:
Uncertainty in contracts and its impact on modern applications – Dr. Muhammad Al-Ameen Ad-Dareer [Arabic]
The insurance system – its reality and legal implications – SH. Mustafa Zarqa [Arabic]
Radd al-Muhtaar ala al-Durr al-Mukhtaar Sharh Tanweer al-Absaar – Muhammad Ameen ibn Abideen [Arabic] view all
Summary: Muslim Knowledge Guide China: Is Insurance Halal or Haram? Takaful, Riba and Gharar Explained is presented here as a clear English Islamic finance essay for Muslim readers, starting with this scene: I translated this article today from the Islamic Finance Guru website . The original is in English. Interestingly, many of the points in the article match what I have written before, and I swear I had never read this piece until now. It keeps the original names, numbers, mosque details, food notes, photographs, and cultural context while focusing on Islamic Finance, Takaful, Halal Insurance.
I translated this article today from the Islamic Finance Guru website . The original is in English. Interestingly, many of the points in the article match what I have written before, and I swear I had never read this piece until now.

In today's world, there are countless sheikhs who are experts in scripture, and many elites who are good at finance. However, it is rare to find a scholar who understands both. This makes it hard for many jurists to make accurate judgments on new, cutting-edge issues. The author of this article, Ibrahim Khan, has both a background in financial theory and practical experience. He holds a bachelor's degree in philosophy, politics, and economics from Oxford University and worked as a private equity and venture capital lawyer in New York City. He also has a solid education in scripture, holding a degree in Islamic studies from the Al Salam Institute and a master's degree in Islamic finance. He is a rare talent in the field of contemporary Islamic finance.
Insurance: Is it Haram or Halal?
(Insurance: Is it halal?)
Author: Ibrahim Khan
Translator: Yehya
Main text:
I suspect this is the most controversial article to appear on IFG. Why do I say that? Most of my views on Islamic finance align with the mainstream, but as I have researched the insurance industry more deeply, I have found myself changing some of my ideas. Here are my preliminary views. I believe most types of insurance should be considered permissible (compliant with Sharia).
I would also add, perhaps you do not realize, that a minority of scholars, both living and deceased, believe insurance is compliant with Sharia. Although the view that insurance is forbidden is common, the view that it is permissible is not new. These scholars who believe insurance is permissible include Sheikh Mustafa Zarqa, Sheikh Ali Al-Khafeef, and Nejatullah Siddiqi. There are also some quite prominent modern scholars, but I have not held academic discussions with them. If they feel it is necessary, they can state their own views.
Basic premise
The basic premise I want everyone to remember is that Islamic Sharia does allow us to use forms of financing to help those who suffer losses due to unknown risks. Traditionally, in the Arab region, if someone in a tribe needed to pay blood money (a large sum of money), everyone in the tribe would contribute a small amount to make up that large sum. They did this as an act of charity, so that none of their members would be crushed by a huge compensation payment. Related to this is halal insurance, a form of mutual aid that I will explain in detail later. For now, remember that pooling wealth to reduce loss is a completely legitimate act. The debate focuses on how it operates and the conditions and framework under which it is conducted.
Uncertainty (gharar)
Arguments against traditional insurance claim it involves interest (riba), uncertainty (gharar), and gambling (maisir). In this article, I will focus on the strongest and most central of these objections: uncertainty.
For this article, let us define insurance as common types like car, home, pet, medical, and business insurance, rather than more complex products like life insurance or reinsurance.
The traditional view holds that Islam forbids uncertain transactions. In insurance, you do not know when a risk will occur after buying a policy. Most people pay premiums without getting a return, so it is considered impermissible because you are unsure if you will ever have an accident.
On the other hand, halal insurance or mutual insurance is allowed because it is fundamentally compensation for loss. Although it looks like traditional insurance, it is actually a good deed. The compensation received might be more or less than the actual loss, similar to how tribal members pool money to pay blood money (diya) for someone, which is considered a virtuous act.
After studying the argument that traditional insurance is illegal due to uncertainty, I concluded that it is not the type of uncertain transaction the Hadith intended to forbid. Let me tell you why.
Hadith involving uncertain transactions:
Sahih Muslim records: Abu Hurairah reported that the Messenger of Allah (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him) forbade speculative sales (bai al-gharar).
Jami` at-Tirmidhi records that the Prophet said: Do not sell what you do not have.
Sahih al-Bukhari and Sahih Muslim record: Ibn Umar reported that the Messenger of Allah (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him) forbade the sale of fruit until it is ripe and free from disease.
Musnad Ahmad and Sunan Ibn Majah record: The Prophet forbade buying an unborn animal in its mother's womb, selling milk in the udder without weighing it in a container, buying war booty before it is distributed, giving charity before receiving the booty, and buying the catch of a diver.
Musnad Ahmad records: The Prophet forbade buying a runaway slave.
Ibn al-Athir al-Ansari records: The Prophet forbade selling fruit before it is ripe.
Sahih al-Bukhari and Sahih Muslim record: The Messenger of Allah allowed the transaction of 'Araya (gifting a date palm to someone, who can then trade the fresh dates on the tree for dried dates by estimation) for amounts less than 5 awsaq (about 653 kilograms), meaning it is allowed to sell fresh dates on the tree in exchange for old dried dates.
Aisha reported: I said, O Messenger of Allah, people borrow bread and yeast from their neighbors and return more or less than what they borrowed. Is this allowed? He said: This does no harm. This is the normal state for people, and they do not want increases or decreases. (Mentioned in Financial Transactions in Islamic Jurisprudence by Zuhayli, page 254). Another narration from Muadh ibn Jabal says: Take the larger and give the smaller, or take the smaller and give the larger; the best among you is the one who is best at repaying debts.
Sahih Muslim records that Ibn Abbas (may Allah be pleased with them) reported that when the Prophet of Allah (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him) came to Medina, they were paying in advance for fruit for one or two years, so he said: Whoever pays in advance must do so for a specified weight and a determined time.
From (1) we can see, as we have already discussed, that transactions with uncertainty are forbidden. But from hadiths (2)-(6) we can analyze why this is done: in each of these cases, the goal is to have a clear, definite contract that leaves no room for dispute, and secondly, the reason for the prohibition is that the harm of the transaction is greater than its benefit.
My view is that traditional insurance is not such a contract because it is clear enough.
Let us look at hadiths (7)-(9): these are just some hadiths where the Prophet allowed some uncertainty in contracts to make things easier for people and merchants, or because it is a custom of the people, and the benefits of the transaction outweigh the harms.
Therefore, we can clearly see that Islam does support some uncertainty in money matters. Thus, the benefits and trading customs of traditional insurance are enough to make it analogous, rather than a forbidden form of uncertainty.
Finally, I find that when people examine the rulings on modern transactions, these are seen as involving a degree of uncertainty, and it is hard for people to define exactly how these rulings, which are seen as legal like Islamic insurance, differ from traditional insurance which is seen as illegal.
Arguments for the negative
The fundamental issue is whether what is bought in an insurance contract is tangible and certain enough to make the contract valid. The Prophet forbade a person from buying a diver's catch until he actually received the catch, returned, and began selling the tangible fish, because it was not clear what was being bought or sold. The subject of the contract must be certain.
But let us imagine the modern era, where big data and historical statistics allow us to model average catches very accurately. In this case, I think there is no problem for Tesco, for example, to sign a one-year contract with a fishing company to provide whatever it catches, as the quantity of the catch is predictable based on known historical averages.
In the insurance industry, insurance companies use big data to gain certainty about their revenue. The question is, do consumers get that same level of certainty? In a competitive market, this helps companies price the product they sell to customers: safety or peace of mind.
Safety or peace of mind might sound like intangible goals. Think of a security guard who gets paid to provide safety. What does that look like? He stands there waiting for the one day a year he is needed, and he stays on call the rest of the time. His job is not just waiting, but also handling any other requests the client might have. Similarly, insurance companies sign contracts, have agents talk to you, provide documents when you need them, and investigate when you file a claim. They are not asked to pay claims every day, but they provide clear and practical services.
A property manager who arranges services for a landlord is another example. If a property needs repairs, the manager handles them. A law firm hired to handle legal requirements is another. Both the property manager and the law firm want to profit from the deal. This is similar to a car or home insurance contract, where the insurance company covers the cost of any damage or theft that might happen.
In short, insurance is a clear contract in our time.
A positive view
Insurance provides certainty, which is important for the business world and for people's daily lives. The Prophet specifically allowed bai salam (letting farmers sell their crops in advance so they can raise money now) because it truly helps people live more easily. As seen in Hadith 9, he weighed the uncertainty of the trade against the benefits and decided the benefits were greater.
I also find the charm in Hadith 7 and 8. They do not apply perfectly here, but they show that unequal exchanges in business deals are sometimes acceptable. In the case of 7, it helps ease business in an area where date palms are the main crop. In the case of 8, it allows for the repayment of debt in a flexible way. Usually, a person must repay a debt exactly, without even adding a gift, to avoid it being seen as interest. However, in this case, maintaining community unity is more important than anything else.
Notice how the Prophet set a simple standard for what is allowed in 7. 650 kilograms is a large measurement, and the Prophet allowed araya trades for amounts less than that. For example, he could have set the weight at 10 kilograms, but his intention was to make business and life easier, not to create difficulties.
Insurance is vital for businesses to maintain steady shipping every month and prevent crises. It also helps help large deals because insurance companies often participate by underwriting the risk of failed transactions or acting as guarantors for all parties. These are all important lubricants for our economy. insurance creates a large amount of wealth, which is then invested throughout society—this is also an important part of a healthy economy.
Insurance has many other benefits, and this article outlines some of them well. In short, the focus is on insurance. While it may have a degree of uncertainty, it is still reasonable because it has great benefits, and our Sharia historically does allow for some beneficial uncertain transactions if the pros outweigh the cons.
Arguments for Muslim insurance.
The concept of blood money mutual aid (diya) is the inspiration for the Muslim insurance models proposed in our time. The basic concept is that a group of people pools their money together, not for profit, but to support each other. I like the cooperative model, and if such a model exists nearby, I would be happy to encourage people to use it—essentially, it is more like a charitable public welfare cause.
But fundamentally, the Muslim insurance model is the same as the traditional model in its important structural elements. The goal of both organizations is to create a surplus, pay the salaries of employees and managers, pool the participants' cash, and then pay claims with that cash. In the Muslim insurance model, there is also a mutual benefit element similar to an exchange contract. It is not just about donating money and ending it there; rather, there is an expectation when donating that the Muslim insurance pool will provide dividends if the donor is in need.
Secondly, if we go back to the blood money situation that Muslim insurance is often compared to, the money was not actually pooled and then invested by the tribe. When disaster struck, the individual tribe would still pay the price, so in a way, this is a purer form of gift (hiba) because there was no contract between the tribes. However, in today's non-tribal and atomized society, this is impractical, so the Muslim insurance model allows people to receive payments in advance. This certainly creates an expectation—and that expectation is profit. So my point is that the Muslim insurance industry has already compromised on the pure blood money setup for practical purposes. Doing so makes it almost identical to traditional insurance companies. If this is acknowledged, then there is actually almost no other substantive difference between the two models.
Yes, the traditional model can be said to be more profit-driven, does not pay any dividends to participants, and charges higher fees. But in reality, from the perspective of the 21st century, we live in a world of free capital flow. International finance and financial institutions span multiple continents, and the population size is incomparable to that of a thousand years ago. We need large-scale Muslim insurance companies to function, and that requires incredible effort. It is unrealistic to expect anyone to handle all this without a profit motive, and existing Muslim insurance companies are also for-profit. The main insurance providers are those who set them up and fund them through Islamic windows—essentially the only entities that can help start a Muslim insurance company—and they will make money from it just like traditional insurance businesses. The only difference is the structure, but the profit motive is exactly the same. They price risks and solve funding shortages just like traditional insurance companies, although in a pure Muslim insurance model, dividends might be distributed based on how much a person contributes because it is a charity, and if there is a loss, other members share it.
Finally, the Cooperative company in the UK is a great model; I learned more about them and actually participated in projects during my research, and they return profits to members and offer discounts in their stores. Interestingly, they performed very poorly before they became commercialized, but after commercialization, they now run very efficiently.
Concluding remarks
This is the longest article I have published on IFG because I need to elaborate more on the arguments presented, as this is a minority position. Please note that this article is just a summary of my views. A more comprehensive analysis would extend to tens of thousands of words. For example, every hadith mentioned has had countless pages written about it over the centuries, and fully analyzing them would require a small book, not to mention all the other relevant hadith that were not mentioned.
A few final points need to be briefly emphasized.
In my view, the legitimacy of Muslim insurance and traditional insurance is almost identical, except for the following points.
Insurance companies invest in haram areas, and if you get a certain return at the end, such as with life insurance, I need to think about this further, but at first glance, the same ruling applies to any fund stock you invest in that has haram components.
In cases where you buy insurance related to property loss, such as car insurance, rather than for any investment motive, I initially think there is no problem because you are signing a contract with the insurance company, and you do not need to worry about what they do with the money.
Life insurance may have special problems compared to other types of insurance, and I cannot comment on this until further research.
Regarding mandatory insurance like car insurance or employer liability insurance, this is certainly fine from the perspective of Sharia, even if all my arguments above are wrong.
Also, as I said at the beginning, my thinking on this topic is still maturing as I research it more deeply. I really want to hear what others think about what is written here, including your ideas and criticisms, so we can learn more from each other.
More resources:
Uncertainty in contracts and its impact on modern applications – Dr. Muhammad Al-Ameen Ad-Dareer [Arabic]
The insurance system – its reality and legal implications – SH. Mustafa Zarqa [Arabic]
Radd al-Muhtaar ala al-Durr al-Mukhtaar Sharh Tanweer al-Absaar – Muhammad Ameen ibn Abideen [Arabic]
Muslim Knowledge Guide China: Is Insurance Halal or Haram? Takaful, Riba and Gharar Explained
Articles • yusuf908 posted the article • 0 comments • 8 views • 19 hours ago
Summary: Muslim Knowledge Guide China: Is Insurance Halal or Haram? Takaful, Riba and Gharar Explained is presented here as a clear English Islamic finance essay for Muslim readers, starting with this scene: I translated this article today from the Islamic Finance Guru website . The original is in English. Interestingly, many of the points in the article match what I have written before, and I swear I had never read this piece until now. It keeps the original names, numbers, mosque details, food notes, photographs, and cultural context while focusing on Islamic Finance, Takaful, Halal Insurance.
I translated this article today from the Islamic Finance Guru website . The original is in English. Interestingly, many of the points in the article match what I have written before, and I swear I had never read this piece until now.
In today's world, there are countless sheikhs who are experts in scripture, and many elites who are good at finance. However, it is rare to find a scholar who understands both. This makes it hard for many jurists to make accurate judgments on new, cutting-edge issues. The author of this article, Ibrahim Khan, has both a background in financial theory and practical experience. He holds a bachelor's degree in philosophy, politics, and economics from Oxford University and worked as a private equity and venture capital lawyer in New York City. He also has a solid education in scripture, holding a degree in Islamic studies from the Al Salam Institute and a master's degree in Islamic finance. He is a rare talent in the field of contemporary Islamic finance.
Insurance: Is it Haram or Halal?
(Insurance: Is it halal?)
Author: Ibrahim Khan
Translator: Yehya
Main text:
I suspect this is the most controversial article to appear on IFG. Why do I say that? Most of my views on Islamic finance align with the mainstream, but as I have researched the insurance industry more deeply, I have found myself changing some of my ideas. Here are my preliminary views. I believe most types of insurance should be considered permissible (compliant with Sharia).
I would also add, perhaps you do not realize, that a minority of scholars, both living and deceased, believe insurance is compliant with Sharia. Although the view that insurance is forbidden is common, the view that it is permissible is not new. These scholars who believe insurance is permissible include Sheikh Mustafa Zarqa, Sheikh Ali Al-Khafeef, and Nejatullah Siddiqi. There are also some quite prominent modern scholars, but I have not held academic discussions with them. If they feel it is necessary, they can state their own views.
Basic premise
The basic premise I want everyone to remember is that Islamic Sharia does allow us to use forms of financing to help those who suffer losses due to unknown risks. Traditionally, in the Arab region, if someone in a tribe needed to pay blood money (a large sum of money), everyone in the tribe would contribute a small amount to make up that large sum. They did this as an act of charity, so that none of their members would be crushed by a huge compensation payment. Related to this is halal insurance, a form of mutual aid that I will explain in detail later. For now, remember that pooling wealth to reduce loss is a completely legitimate act. The debate focuses on how it operates and the conditions and framework under which it is conducted.
Uncertainty (gharar)
Arguments against traditional insurance claim it involves interest (riba), uncertainty (gharar), and gambling (maisir). In this article, I will focus on the strongest and most central of these objections: uncertainty.
For this article, let us define insurance as common types like car, home, pet, medical, and business insurance, rather than more complex products like life insurance or reinsurance.
The traditional view holds that Islam forbids uncertain transactions. In insurance, you do not know when a risk will occur after buying a policy. Most people pay premiums without getting a return, so it is considered impermissible because you are unsure if you will ever have an accident.
On the other hand, halal insurance or mutual insurance is allowed because it is fundamentally compensation for loss. Although it looks like traditional insurance, it is actually a good deed. The compensation received might be more or less than the actual loss, similar to how tribal members pool money to pay blood money (diya) for someone, which is considered a virtuous act.
After studying the argument that traditional insurance is illegal due to uncertainty, I concluded that it is not the type of uncertain transaction the Hadith intended to forbid. Let me tell you why.
Hadith involving uncertain transactions:
Sahih Muslim records: Abu Hurairah reported that the Messenger of Allah (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him) forbade speculative sales (bai al-gharar).
Jami` at-Tirmidhi records that the Prophet said: Do not sell what you do not have.
Sahih al-Bukhari and Sahih Muslim record: Ibn Umar reported that the Messenger of Allah (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him) forbade the sale of fruit until it is ripe and free from disease.
Musnad Ahmad and Sunan Ibn Majah record: The Prophet forbade buying an unborn animal in its mother's womb, selling milk in the udder without weighing it in a container, buying war booty before it is distributed, giving charity before receiving the booty, and buying the catch of a diver.
Musnad Ahmad records: The Prophet forbade buying a runaway slave.
Ibn al-Athir al-Ansari records: The Prophet forbade selling fruit before it is ripe.
Sahih al-Bukhari and Sahih Muslim record: The Messenger of Allah allowed the transaction of 'Araya (gifting a date palm to someone, who can then trade the fresh dates on the tree for dried dates by estimation) for amounts less than 5 awsaq (about 653 kilograms), meaning it is allowed to sell fresh dates on the tree in exchange for old dried dates.
Aisha reported: I said, O Messenger of Allah, people borrow bread and yeast from their neighbors and return more or less than what they borrowed. Is this allowed? He said: This does no harm. This is the normal state for people, and they do not want increases or decreases. (Mentioned in Financial Transactions in Islamic Jurisprudence by Zuhayli, page 254). Another narration from Muadh ibn Jabal says: Take the larger and give the smaller, or take the smaller and give the larger; the best among you is the one who is best at repaying debts.
Sahih Muslim records that Ibn Abbas (may Allah be pleased with them) reported that when the Prophet of Allah (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him) came to Medina, they were paying in advance for fruit for one or two years, so he said: Whoever pays in advance must do so for a specified weight and a determined time.
From (1) we can see, as we have already discussed, that transactions with uncertainty are forbidden. But from hadiths (2)-(6) we can analyze why this is done: in each of these cases, the goal is to have a clear, definite contract that leaves no room for dispute, and secondly, the reason for the prohibition is that the harm of the transaction is greater than its benefit.
My view is that traditional insurance is not such a contract because it is clear enough.
Let us look at hadiths (7)-(9): these are just some hadiths where the Prophet allowed some uncertainty in contracts to make things easier for people and merchants, or because it is a custom of the people, and the benefits of the transaction outweigh the harms.
Therefore, we can clearly see that Islam does support some uncertainty in money matters. Thus, the benefits and trading customs of traditional insurance are enough to make it analogous, rather than a forbidden form of uncertainty.
Finally, I find that when people examine the rulings on modern transactions, these are seen as involving a degree of uncertainty, and it is hard for people to define exactly how these rulings, which are seen as legal like Islamic insurance, differ from traditional insurance which is seen as illegal.
Arguments for the negative
The fundamental issue is whether what is bought in an insurance contract is tangible and certain enough to make the contract valid. The Prophet forbade a person from buying a diver's catch until he actually received the catch, returned, and began selling the tangible fish, because it was not clear what was being bought or sold. The subject of the contract must be certain.
But let us imagine the modern era, where big data and historical statistics allow us to model average catches very accurately. In this case, I think there is no problem for Tesco, for example, to sign a one-year contract with a fishing company to provide whatever it catches, as the quantity of the catch is predictable based on known historical averages.
In the insurance industry, insurance companies use big data to gain certainty about their revenue. The question is, do consumers get that same level of certainty? In a competitive market, this helps companies price the product they sell to customers: safety or peace of mind.
Safety or peace of mind might sound like intangible goals. Think of a security guard who gets paid to provide safety. What does that look like? He stands there waiting for the one day a year he is needed, and he stays on call the rest of the time. His job is not just waiting, but also handling any other requests the client might have. Similarly, insurance companies sign contracts, have agents talk to you, provide documents when you need them, and investigate when you file a claim. They are not asked to pay claims every day, but they provide clear and practical services.
A property manager who arranges services for a landlord is another example. If a property needs repairs, the manager handles them. A law firm hired to handle legal requirements is another. Both the property manager and the law firm want to profit from the deal. This is similar to a car or home insurance contract, where the insurance company covers the cost of any damage or theft that might happen.
In short, insurance is a clear contract in our time.
A positive view
Insurance provides certainty, which is important for the business world and for people's daily lives. The Prophet specifically allowed bai salam (letting farmers sell their crops in advance so they can raise money now) because it truly helps people live more easily. As seen in Hadith 9, he weighed the uncertainty of the trade against the benefits and decided the benefits were greater.
I also find the charm in Hadith 7 and 8. They do not apply perfectly here, but they show that unequal exchanges in business deals are sometimes acceptable. In the case of 7, it helps ease business in an area where date palms are the main crop. In the case of 8, it allows for the repayment of debt in a flexible way. Usually, a person must repay a debt exactly, without even adding a gift, to avoid it being seen as interest. However, in this case, maintaining community unity is more important than anything else.
Notice how the Prophet set a simple standard for what is allowed in 7. 650 kilograms is a large measurement, and the Prophet allowed araya trades for amounts less than that. For example, he could have set the weight at 10 kilograms, but his intention was to make business and life easier, not to create difficulties.
Insurance is vital for businesses to maintain steady shipping every month and prevent crises. It also helps help large deals because insurance companies often participate by underwriting the risk of failed transactions or acting as guarantors for all parties. These are all important lubricants for our economy. insurance creates a large amount of wealth, which is then invested throughout society—this is also an important part of a healthy economy.
Insurance has many other benefits, and this article outlines some of them well. In short, the focus is on insurance. While it may have a degree of uncertainty, it is still reasonable because it has great benefits, and our Sharia historically does allow for some beneficial uncertain transactions if the pros outweigh the cons.
Arguments for Muslim insurance.
The concept of blood money mutual aid (diya) is the inspiration for the Muslim insurance models proposed in our time. The basic concept is that a group of people pools their money together, not for profit, but to support each other. I like the cooperative model, and if such a model exists nearby, I would be happy to encourage people to use it—essentially, it is more like a charitable public welfare cause.
But fundamentally, the Muslim insurance model is the same as the traditional model in its important structural elements. The goal of both organizations is to create a surplus, pay the salaries of employees and managers, pool the participants' cash, and then pay claims with that cash. In the Muslim insurance model, there is also a mutual benefit element similar to an exchange contract. It is not just about donating money and ending it there; rather, there is an expectation when donating that the Muslim insurance pool will provide dividends if the donor is in need.
Secondly, if we go back to the blood money situation that Muslim insurance is often compared to, the money was not actually pooled and then invested by the tribe. When disaster struck, the individual tribe would still pay the price, so in a way, this is a purer form of gift (hiba) because there was no contract between the tribes. However, in today's non-tribal and atomized society, this is impractical, so the Muslim insurance model allows people to receive payments in advance. This certainly creates an expectation—and that expectation is profit. So my point is that the Muslim insurance industry has already compromised on the pure blood money setup for practical purposes. Doing so makes it almost identical to traditional insurance companies. If this is acknowledged, then there is actually almost no other substantive difference between the two models.
Yes, the traditional model can be said to be more profit-driven, does not pay any dividends to participants, and charges higher fees. But in reality, from the perspective of the 21st century, we live in a world of free capital flow. International finance and financial institutions span multiple continents, and the population size is incomparable to that of a thousand years ago. We need large-scale Muslim insurance companies to function, and that requires incredible effort. It is unrealistic to expect anyone to handle all this without a profit motive, and existing Muslim insurance companies are also for-profit. The main insurance providers are those who set them up and fund them through Islamic windows—essentially the only entities that can help start a Muslim insurance company—and they will make money from it just like traditional insurance businesses. The only difference is the structure, but the profit motive is exactly the same. They price risks and solve funding shortages just like traditional insurance companies, although in a pure Muslim insurance model, dividends might be distributed based on how much a person contributes because it is a charity, and if there is a loss, other members share it.
Finally, the Cooperative company in the UK is a great model; I learned more about them and actually participated in projects during my research, and they return profits to members and offer discounts in their stores. Interestingly, they performed very poorly before they became commercialized, but after commercialization, they now run very efficiently.
Concluding remarks
This is the longest article I have published on IFG because I need to elaborate more on the arguments presented, as this is a minority position. Please note that this article is just a summary of my views. A more comprehensive analysis would extend to tens of thousands of words. For example, every hadith mentioned has had countless pages written about it over the centuries, and fully analyzing them would require a small book, not to mention all the other relevant hadith that were not mentioned.
A few final points need to be briefly emphasized.
In my view, the legitimacy of Muslim insurance and traditional insurance is almost identical, except for the following points.
Insurance companies invest in haram areas, and if you get a certain return at the end, such as with life insurance, I need to think about this further, but at first glance, the same ruling applies to any fund stock you invest in that has haram components.
In cases where you buy insurance related to property loss, such as car insurance, rather than for any investment motive, I initially think there is no problem because you are signing a contract with the insurance company, and you do not need to worry about what they do with the money.
Life insurance may have special problems compared to other types of insurance, and I cannot comment on this until further research.
Regarding mandatory insurance like car insurance or employer liability insurance, this is certainly fine from the perspective of Sharia, even if all my arguments above are wrong.
Also, as I said at the beginning, my thinking on this topic is still maturing as I research it more deeply. I really want to hear what others think about what is written here, including your ideas and criticisms, so we can learn more from each other.
More resources:
Uncertainty in contracts and its impact on modern applications – Dr. Muhammad Al-Ameen Ad-Dareer [Arabic]
The insurance system – its reality and legal implications – SH. Mustafa Zarqa [Arabic]
Radd al-Muhtaar ala al-Durr al-Mukhtaar Sharh Tanweer al-Absaar – Muhammad Ameen ibn Abideen [Arabic] view all
Summary: Muslim Knowledge Guide China: Is Insurance Halal or Haram? Takaful, Riba and Gharar Explained is presented here as a clear English Islamic finance essay for Muslim readers, starting with this scene: I translated this article today from the Islamic Finance Guru website . The original is in English. Interestingly, many of the points in the article match what I have written before, and I swear I had never read this piece until now. It keeps the original names, numbers, mosque details, food notes, photographs, and cultural context while focusing on Islamic Finance, Takaful, Halal Insurance.
I translated this article today from the Islamic Finance Guru website . The original is in English. Interestingly, many of the points in the article match what I have written before, and I swear I had never read this piece until now.

In today's world, there are countless sheikhs who are experts in scripture, and many elites who are good at finance. However, it is rare to find a scholar who understands both. This makes it hard for many jurists to make accurate judgments on new, cutting-edge issues. The author of this article, Ibrahim Khan, has both a background in financial theory and practical experience. He holds a bachelor's degree in philosophy, politics, and economics from Oxford University and worked as a private equity and venture capital lawyer in New York City. He also has a solid education in scripture, holding a degree in Islamic studies from the Al Salam Institute and a master's degree in Islamic finance. He is a rare talent in the field of contemporary Islamic finance.
Insurance: Is it Haram or Halal?
(Insurance: Is it halal?)
Author: Ibrahim Khan
Translator: Yehya
Main text:
I suspect this is the most controversial article to appear on IFG. Why do I say that? Most of my views on Islamic finance align with the mainstream, but as I have researched the insurance industry more deeply, I have found myself changing some of my ideas. Here are my preliminary views. I believe most types of insurance should be considered permissible (compliant with Sharia).
I would also add, perhaps you do not realize, that a minority of scholars, both living and deceased, believe insurance is compliant with Sharia. Although the view that insurance is forbidden is common, the view that it is permissible is not new. These scholars who believe insurance is permissible include Sheikh Mustafa Zarqa, Sheikh Ali Al-Khafeef, and Nejatullah Siddiqi. There are also some quite prominent modern scholars, but I have not held academic discussions with them. If they feel it is necessary, they can state their own views.
Basic premise
The basic premise I want everyone to remember is that Islamic Sharia does allow us to use forms of financing to help those who suffer losses due to unknown risks. Traditionally, in the Arab region, if someone in a tribe needed to pay blood money (a large sum of money), everyone in the tribe would contribute a small amount to make up that large sum. They did this as an act of charity, so that none of their members would be crushed by a huge compensation payment. Related to this is halal insurance, a form of mutual aid that I will explain in detail later. For now, remember that pooling wealth to reduce loss is a completely legitimate act. The debate focuses on how it operates and the conditions and framework under which it is conducted.
Uncertainty (gharar)
Arguments against traditional insurance claim it involves interest (riba), uncertainty (gharar), and gambling (maisir). In this article, I will focus on the strongest and most central of these objections: uncertainty.
For this article, let us define insurance as common types like car, home, pet, medical, and business insurance, rather than more complex products like life insurance or reinsurance.
The traditional view holds that Islam forbids uncertain transactions. In insurance, you do not know when a risk will occur after buying a policy. Most people pay premiums without getting a return, so it is considered impermissible because you are unsure if you will ever have an accident.
On the other hand, halal insurance or mutual insurance is allowed because it is fundamentally compensation for loss. Although it looks like traditional insurance, it is actually a good deed. The compensation received might be more or less than the actual loss, similar to how tribal members pool money to pay blood money (diya) for someone, which is considered a virtuous act.
After studying the argument that traditional insurance is illegal due to uncertainty, I concluded that it is not the type of uncertain transaction the Hadith intended to forbid. Let me tell you why.
Hadith involving uncertain transactions:
Sahih Muslim records: Abu Hurairah reported that the Messenger of Allah (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him) forbade speculative sales (bai al-gharar).
Jami` at-Tirmidhi records that the Prophet said: Do not sell what you do not have.
Sahih al-Bukhari and Sahih Muslim record: Ibn Umar reported that the Messenger of Allah (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him) forbade the sale of fruit until it is ripe and free from disease.
Musnad Ahmad and Sunan Ibn Majah record: The Prophet forbade buying an unborn animal in its mother's womb, selling milk in the udder without weighing it in a container, buying war booty before it is distributed, giving charity before receiving the booty, and buying the catch of a diver.
Musnad Ahmad records: The Prophet forbade buying a runaway slave.
Ibn al-Athir al-Ansari records: The Prophet forbade selling fruit before it is ripe.
Sahih al-Bukhari and Sahih Muslim record: The Messenger of Allah allowed the transaction of 'Araya (gifting a date palm to someone, who can then trade the fresh dates on the tree for dried dates by estimation) for amounts less than 5 awsaq (about 653 kilograms), meaning it is allowed to sell fresh dates on the tree in exchange for old dried dates.
Aisha reported: I said, O Messenger of Allah, people borrow bread and yeast from their neighbors and return more or less than what they borrowed. Is this allowed? He said: This does no harm. This is the normal state for people, and they do not want increases or decreases. (Mentioned in Financial Transactions in Islamic Jurisprudence by Zuhayli, page 254). Another narration from Muadh ibn Jabal says: Take the larger and give the smaller, or take the smaller and give the larger; the best among you is the one who is best at repaying debts.
Sahih Muslim records that Ibn Abbas (may Allah be pleased with them) reported that when the Prophet of Allah (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him) came to Medina, they were paying in advance for fruit for one or two years, so he said: Whoever pays in advance must do so for a specified weight and a determined time.
From (1) we can see, as we have already discussed, that transactions with uncertainty are forbidden. But from hadiths (2)-(6) we can analyze why this is done: in each of these cases, the goal is to have a clear, definite contract that leaves no room for dispute, and secondly, the reason for the prohibition is that the harm of the transaction is greater than its benefit.
My view is that traditional insurance is not such a contract because it is clear enough.
Let us look at hadiths (7)-(9): these are just some hadiths where the Prophet allowed some uncertainty in contracts to make things easier for people and merchants, or because it is a custom of the people, and the benefits of the transaction outweigh the harms.
Therefore, we can clearly see that Islam does support some uncertainty in money matters. Thus, the benefits and trading customs of traditional insurance are enough to make it analogous, rather than a forbidden form of uncertainty.
Finally, I find that when people examine the rulings on modern transactions, these are seen as involving a degree of uncertainty, and it is hard for people to define exactly how these rulings, which are seen as legal like Islamic insurance, differ from traditional insurance which is seen as illegal.
Arguments for the negative
The fundamental issue is whether what is bought in an insurance contract is tangible and certain enough to make the contract valid. The Prophet forbade a person from buying a diver's catch until he actually received the catch, returned, and began selling the tangible fish, because it was not clear what was being bought or sold. The subject of the contract must be certain.
But let us imagine the modern era, where big data and historical statistics allow us to model average catches very accurately. In this case, I think there is no problem for Tesco, for example, to sign a one-year contract with a fishing company to provide whatever it catches, as the quantity of the catch is predictable based on known historical averages.
In the insurance industry, insurance companies use big data to gain certainty about their revenue. The question is, do consumers get that same level of certainty? In a competitive market, this helps companies price the product they sell to customers: safety or peace of mind.
Safety or peace of mind might sound like intangible goals. Think of a security guard who gets paid to provide safety. What does that look like? He stands there waiting for the one day a year he is needed, and he stays on call the rest of the time. His job is not just waiting, but also handling any other requests the client might have. Similarly, insurance companies sign contracts, have agents talk to you, provide documents when you need them, and investigate when you file a claim. They are not asked to pay claims every day, but they provide clear and practical services.
A property manager who arranges services for a landlord is another example. If a property needs repairs, the manager handles them. A law firm hired to handle legal requirements is another. Both the property manager and the law firm want to profit from the deal. This is similar to a car or home insurance contract, where the insurance company covers the cost of any damage or theft that might happen.
In short, insurance is a clear contract in our time.
A positive view
Insurance provides certainty, which is important for the business world and for people's daily lives. The Prophet specifically allowed bai salam (letting farmers sell their crops in advance so they can raise money now) because it truly helps people live more easily. As seen in Hadith 9, he weighed the uncertainty of the trade against the benefits and decided the benefits were greater.
I also find the charm in Hadith 7 and 8. They do not apply perfectly here, but they show that unequal exchanges in business deals are sometimes acceptable. In the case of 7, it helps ease business in an area where date palms are the main crop. In the case of 8, it allows for the repayment of debt in a flexible way. Usually, a person must repay a debt exactly, without even adding a gift, to avoid it being seen as interest. However, in this case, maintaining community unity is more important than anything else.
Notice how the Prophet set a simple standard for what is allowed in 7. 650 kilograms is a large measurement, and the Prophet allowed araya trades for amounts less than that. For example, he could have set the weight at 10 kilograms, but his intention was to make business and life easier, not to create difficulties.
Insurance is vital for businesses to maintain steady shipping every month and prevent crises. It also helps help large deals because insurance companies often participate by underwriting the risk of failed transactions or acting as guarantors for all parties. These are all important lubricants for our economy. insurance creates a large amount of wealth, which is then invested throughout society—this is also an important part of a healthy economy.
Insurance has many other benefits, and this article outlines some of them well. In short, the focus is on insurance. While it may have a degree of uncertainty, it is still reasonable because it has great benefits, and our Sharia historically does allow for some beneficial uncertain transactions if the pros outweigh the cons.
Arguments for Muslim insurance.
The concept of blood money mutual aid (diya) is the inspiration for the Muslim insurance models proposed in our time. The basic concept is that a group of people pools their money together, not for profit, but to support each other. I like the cooperative model, and if such a model exists nearby, I would be happy to encourage people to use it—essentially, it is more like a charitable public welfare cause.
But fundamentally, the Muslim insurance model is the same as the traditional model in its important structural elements. The goal of both organizations is to create a surplus, pay the salaries of employees and managers, pool the participants' cash, and then pay claims with that cash. In the Muslim insurance model, there is also a mutual benefit element similar to an exchange contract. It is not just about donating money and ending it there; rather, there is an expectation when donating that the Muslim insurance pool will provide dividends if the donor is in need.
Secondly, if we go back to the blood money situation that Muslim insurance is often compared to, the money was not actually pooled and then invested by the tribe. When disaster struck, the individual tribe would still pay the price, so in a way, this is a purer form of gift (hiba) because there was no contract between the tribes. However, in today's non-tribal and atomized society, this is impractical, so the Muslim insurance model allows people to receive payments in advance. This certainly creates an expectation—and that expectation is profit. So my point is that the Muslim insurance industry has already compromised on the pure blood money setup for practical purposes. Doing so makes it almost identical to traditional insurance companies. If this is acknowledged, then there is actually almost no other substantive difference between the two models.
Yes, the traditional model can be said to be more profit-driven, does not pay any dividends to participants, and charges higher fees. But in reality, from the perspective of the 21st century, we live in a world of free capital flow. International finance and financial institutions span multiple continents, and the population size is incomparable to that of a thousand years ago. We need large-scale Muslim insurance companies to function, and that requires incredible effort. It is unrealistic to expect anyone to handle all this without a profit motive, and existing Muslim insurance companies are also for-profit. The main insurance providers are those who set them up and fund them through Islamic windows—essentially the only entities that can help start a Muslim insurance company—and they will make money from it just like traditional insurance businesses. The only difference is the structure, but the profit motive is exactly the same. They price risks and solve funding shortages just like traditional insurance companies, although in a pure Muslim insurance model, dividends might be distributed based on how much a person contributes because it is a charity, and if there is a loss, other members share it.
Finally, the Cooperative company in the UK is a great model; I learned more about them and actually participated in projects during my research, and they return profits to members and offer discounts in their stores. Interestingly, they performed very poorly before they became commercialized, but after commercialization, they now run very efficiently.
Concluding remarks
This is the longest article I have published on IFG because I need to elaborate more on the arguments presented, as this is a minority position. Please note that this article is just a summary of my views. A more comprehensive analysis would extend to tens of thousands of words. For example, every hadith mentioned has had countless pages written about it over the centuries, and fully analyzing them would require a small book, not to mention all the other relevant hadith that were not mentioned.
A few final points need to be briefly emphasized.
In my view, the legitimacy of Muslim insurance and traditional insurance is almost identical, except for the following points.
Insurance companies invest in haram areas, and if you get a certain return at the end, such as with life insurance, I need to think about this further, but at first glance, the same ruling applies to any fund stock you invest in that has haram components.
In cases where you buy insurance related to property loss, such as car insurance, rather than for any investment motive, I initially think there is no problem because you are signing a contract with the insurance company, and you do not need to worry about what they do with the money.
Life insurance may have special problems compared to other types of insurance, and I cannot comment on this until further research.
Regarding mandatory insurance like car insurance or employer liability insurance, this is certainly fine from the perspective of Sharia, even if all my arguments above are wrong.
Also, as I said at the beginning, my thinking on this topic is still maturing as I research it more deeply. I really want to hear what others think about what is written here, including your ideas and criticisms, so we can learn more from each other.
More resources:
Uncertainty in contracts and its impact on modern applications – Dr. Muhammad Al-Ameen Ad-Dareer [Arabic]
The insurance system – its reality and legal implications – SH. Mustafa Zarqa [Arabic]
Radd al-Muhtaar ala al-Durr al-Mukhtaar Sharh Tanweer al-Absaar – Muhammad Ameen ibn Abideen [Arabic]