Sunday, August 05, 2007

Call for Muslim economists

More empirical studies must be done to counter-argue this:

In praise of usury
from The Economist Print Edition
Ignore credit snobs. It is no sin to profit from lending to the poor
IN DANTE'S "Divine Comedy", usurers are consigned to a flaming desert of sand within the seventh circle of hell. Attitudes have since softened a bit. Microcreditors, who offer small loans to self-employed poor people, enjoy hallowed reputations. One has even ascended to the rank of a Nobel laureate. But lending to the poor is still considered distasteful whenever it is pricey, short-term and profitable. In America, for example, many activists are quick to damn "payday" lenders, who may charge high fees for offering cash advances on a worker's next pay cheque.

Why this hostility? To profit from lending to the poor, critics say, is to prey on the most vulnerable, at their most vulnerable moment. Faced with desperate customers, loan sharks can charge well over the odds, even when the risk of default is slight. The money they proffer is often squandered on spurious consumption, critics say, rather than productive investments that would help the borrower repay his debts. Easy credit thus tempts people into a damaging spiral of indebtedness. …

Friday, August 03, 2007

My book

It's a book on Islamic Personal Finance (Malay).

Check it out: Hidup Kaya Tanpa Riba

Wednesday, August 01, 2007

Capitalism unresolved problem

Yawning rich-poor gap could hobble economy

Ethics, accountability, responsibility and proper mechanism are in Islam.