Worldwide business students turn to Islamic finance

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It is no secret that conventional financial systems are not working and the sector is looking for alternative and responsible ways of doing business.
Islamic finance poses an ethical and non-conventional model and is currently the only area with strong growth, said Professor Ignacio dela Torre, Academic Director of the Master in Finance Programmes at Spain’s Instituto de Empressa (IE) Business School last week.
Dela Torre was speaking at the relaunch of the Saudi-Spanish Centre for Islamic Economics and Finance, a partnership between IE Business School and Saudi Arabia’s King Abdul Aziz University.
The relaunch coincided with a conference on “Islamic Finance in the 21st century”. He said when employment levels are high in the West, it makes sense for finance students to familiarise themselves with alternative finance models that also include eco-finance and micro-finance. “From a macroeconomic point of view it makes sense that European governments and financial markets set up Islamic windows so excess liquidity can be channelled through some European financing markets with these structures.”
Expertise needed
“There is already $1 trillion (Dh3.67 trillion) of Islamic money and it is growing at 20 percent with $200 million of additional Islamic money coming in every year,” said Dela Torre.
Students are showing interest in this area of finance and universities in the United Kingdom and France have responded to the demand early on. Over the past five years, IE has been offering Islamic finance programmes.
“When you travel to the Gulf, where 50 percent of banking is Islamised, there are not enough people with skills and understanding of Islamic finance,” he said. He added that from a career perspective it is wise to have knowledge of this area because those who work in conventional finance will sooner or later be faced with Islamic finance.
Dela Torre says the field is not difficult to understand once the basics are covered in the curriculum illustrated by the fact most expatriate professionals in the GCC’s Islamic banking sector are Americans and Indians.
Dr. Ahmad Mohammad Ali Al Madani, Head of Islamic Development Bank, said since the financial crisis, people have become more concerned with where their money ends up once invested and not just profit margins.
Celia de Anca, professor of Islamic Finance at IE Business School, added that students are increasingly interested in financial sustainability and ethics.


Comments
Thanks for the article .....
Well' yes i think the Islamic financial system might not be a magic solution to the fractional banking system of the current capitalism at least in the short run .
yet the financial crisis that we are in let many including western people become more concerned and conscious with where their money ends up once invested and not just to the profit margins.
And its obvious that the Islamic finance is in growth not only in the middle east but also in the western region as it poses an ethical and non-conventional model so far .
so we may say that its might no be an immediate solution to the current financial problems that we are in , but no doubt that many people start to think about the Islamic finance as an option to their financial investment solutions including many western .
I am sorry to say that current practices in Islamic Banking is no panacea to avert the greatest credit bubble that has been inflated in the history of mankind via fractional reserve banking and infinite flow of paper money. Islamic banking at its core uses the same concepts of fractional reserve banking, and combined with electronic and paper money and interest rate benchmarks, are the other side of the same coin. Islamic banking is linked to conventional banking via inflated asset prices, and therefore, prone to global hyperinflationary or deflationary pressures depending on whether there is a squeeze in money supply or continued quantitative easing into oblivion.
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