Product details
- Categories: Economic and Monetary Affairs
- Publisher: EDWARD ELGAR PUBLISHING
- ISBN: 9781849800174
- Publication Date: 04/04/2010
- Binding: Hardback
- Number of pages: 256
- Language: English
Summary
This timely book examines the authorization of Shari’ah-compliant intermediaries as either credit institutions or as investment companies in the European Union.
The contributing authors explore the key topics of this area through differing yet parallel perspectives – for example, comparing economic and legal standpoints, looking at both European and national levels and considering both academic and technical approaches. The book discusses the common origin of Islamic and Western traditions in commercial and banking transactions, reviewing a period in which the Italian merchants and their organizations drove the rebirth of post-medieval society in trade and law. The editors investigate whether the Islamic banking and financial model complies with the European framework, spelling out the different experiences in single Member States (Germany, France, Italy, and the United Kingdom). Notwithstanding the obstacles to being authorized as domestic credit institutions, they conclude that the access of Islamic intermediaries is suitable and may have positive effects on European integration, as well as increasing the competition among the stand-still operators and evoking the ethical dimension of banking and finance. The book also highlights how Islamic banking would make the industry more inclusive.
This multidisciplinary book will appeal greatly to economics and legal scholars with an interest in European and international banking and financial law, as well as postgraduate students in international law and banking law. Practitioners and regulators will also find this book an invaluable resource.
Table of contents
Preface
Introduction
M. Fahim Khan and Mario Porzio
PART I: HISTORICAL BACKGROUND
1. From the Poor to the Merchant
Umberto Santarelli
PART II: ISLAMIC BANKING BUSINESS
2. The Provision and Management of Savings: The Client–Partner Model
Gian Maria Piccinelli
3. Islamic Finance: Personal and Enterprise Banking
Frank E. Vogel
4. Islamic Banking in Europe: The Regulatory Challenge
M. Fahim Khan
5. Islamic Finance and Ethical Investments: Some Points of Reconsideration
Valentino Cattelan
PART III: THE CHALLENGE
6. Islamic Banking versus Conventional Banking
Claudio Porzio
7. Islamic Banking: A Challenge for the Basel Capital Accord
Elisabetta Montanaro
8. Investing with Values: Ethical Investment versus Islamic Investment
Celia de Anca
9. Islamic Banking and the ‘Duty of Accommodation’
Gabriella Gimigliano
10. The Remuneration of Sight Accounts and the Feasible Competition between Islamic and Western Systems
Gennaro Rotondo
PART IV: RESPONSE FROM THE EUROPEAN COUNTRIES: ENGLISH, FRENCH, GERMAN AND ITALIAN EXPERIENCES
11. The French Licensing Authority Faced with the Globalisation of Islamic Finance: A Flexible Position
Christophe Arnaud
12. German Banking Supervision and its Relationship to Islamic Banks
Johannes Engels
13. Islamic Banking and Prudential Supervision in Italy
Luigi Donato and Maria Alessandra Freni
14. Islamic Banking: Impression of an Italian Jurist
Pietro Abbadessa
15. Islamic Banking in the United Kingdom
Rodney Wilson
16. The Riba Prohibition and Payment Institutions
Vittorio Santoro
Index