Thus an individual, corporate or any other institution (eg government) is not allowed to sell to a third party the debt a debtor owes to it, for a price other than the face value of the debt. Furthermore, there is a clear prohibition on selling debt for debt even if the two (deferred counter-values) are equal.
There is a simple rationale behind it. Islam does not allow re-pricing of debt even if it is between the initial creditor and debtor. This is so because pre-agreed (contractual) re-pricing of debt is likely to give rise to the pre-Islamic practice of interest, known as riba, which Islam prohibited.
Although a creditor enjoys discretion to offer an early payment rebate to the debtor, Shariah does not allow formalising this discretion in the original debt agreement between the two parties. In the case of late payment by the debtor, classical Shariah opinion disallows a penalty, although the contemporary Shariah view is flexible.
In modern day practice of Islamic banking, default penalty is allowed, as long as it is used only as a deterrent to wilful non-payment or delay. In practice, this means that the creditor should not benefit, directly or indirectly, from the amount of the penalty, rather it should be given away as charity. Discretionary rebate is normally applied to early payment but may also be exercised if payments remain in accordance with the contractual schedule. It is equally permissible (rather preferred) for the debtor to pay more than he borrowed, as long as it remains discretionary on the part of the debtor and there is no contractual agreement on it.
In both the rebate and penalty cases, effectively the debt agreement is re-negotiated – potentially shortening the contract in the case of rebate and prolonging in the case of late payment or default.
Third party
Although re-pricing and limited re-negotiation of debt contracts is possible between a creditor and debtor even in Islamic finance, the mechanisms of doing so do not allow creditors to sell their debt in a meaningful way to a third party for a discounted price.
For example, consider bank A that owns a Murabaha asset with a face value of $100, which was created by selling a Shariah-compliant asset to client C on a deferred payment basis. Applying the prohibition of discounted trading in debt, bank A can sell the Murabaha asset (debt in the form of receivable) to a third party B for a price no other than $100, which must be paid on the spot (by B). If A wants to sell this debt to B for a lower price, say $90, it could do so only after unilaterally forgiving (or writing off) $10 from the debt owed by C, and then selling the remaining debt for its face value of $90. Of course, this makes little sense for B who would otherwise wish to benefit from the discount.
Having said that, there might be cases where parties A and B still wish to proceed with the transaction, which would be in compliance with Shariah.
Debt collecting agent
While discounted sale of debt is prohibited, Shariah allows partial transfer of debt through agency-based debt collection. Thus, it is permissible for creditor A to appoint a third party B as its agent to collect its debt receivable against a fixed fee and/or variable rate determined by B’s performance.
In practice, a combination of undiscounted trading in debt and the agency-based debt collection contracts can affect the economic effects of discounted trading in debt.
For example, a corporate owning a debt-based portfolio worth $100 may wish to “sell” it off by selling 50% of it to a third party for its face value, ie, $50. In addition, it appoints the same third party as its agent to collect the remaining 50% of the debt from its debtors against an agency fee of 50% of the amount collected.
This combination of debt sale and debt collection gives rise to a Shariah-compliant way of achieving the economic effect of selling $100 worth of debt, with a 25% discount.
Shariah vs conventional
There are two differences between this Shariah-compliant solution and the conventional discounted trading in debt. First, during the term of the contract between the creditor and its agent, the debt (50% of the total in this example) remains on the creditor’s balance sheet until it is paid off (ie, it is collected by the agent).
Second, the combination of (undiscounted) sale of debt and agency for debt collection is a performance-based arrangement, as the amount of “discount” very much depends on the recovery and collection of debt. If the agency fee was a fixed percentage of the amount recovered, the combination model would offer a variable “discount” depending on the performance of the agent.
The writer is an economist and PhD from Cambridge University
Published in The Express Tribune, April 7th, 2014.
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COMMENTS (8)
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Nice article.
Shariah also requires that the source of money be riba free. In this day and age, there is no way for any of the funds used to finance said shariah products, will be riba free. Not unless the complete chain of money is maintained separately, which is impossible.
Also, having checked about "halal" mortgages in UK, that have been certified as "shariah compliant" by various "Islamic" scholars, I found that they were anything but. One has to ask the right questions and the mortgage seller will soon reveal a) the source of the money and b) an interest rate linked to it.
Islamic and Banking cannot be used in the same sentence since it is a bit of a paradox itself. The so-called "Islamic Banking" products are merely conventional products repackaged with Arabic sounding names to make them seem legit. A great example would be the "rent to own" schemes where the rent paid over the amortization period equals the current lending mortgage rate by any competitive bank. I've had great many arguments with "Islamic Bankers" and they all fail to debate logically, in the end resorting comparing the baking contract to a nikah-nama where cohabitation is "legitimized". Just because it sounds Arabic does not necessarily make it halal. Banking is a huge business and our so-called Arab brothers (just as much as they may look down upon us) still need our hard earned or questionable money to keep their banks afloat.
Look at the picture. It shows old notes of Rs 100, 500 and 1000. lolz
@shah: trust me when I say, modern banking is exponentially more complex than this. Financial derivatives, forwards, etc innumerable methods, many of whom dont involve making any product or seedling any real item :)
The underlying fundamentals and structures are different but in its form it is very similar to Conventional Banking. Therefore, from a Customer's point of view, it is almost identical unless he / she reads the agreements carefully which will enlighten him / her to the different rights and responsibilities attached in Islamic Finance.
Sustainability cannot be questioned since the growth of Islamic Finance in the last decade is there to be witnessed and acknowledged by everyone. It is a phenomenon that is even emerging in non muslim countries...
Obviously a refresher course in the functioning of finance is deeply required by the Shariah group in the UK.
This is Shariah banking sounds overcomplicated and unsustainable to me.