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What is Mudarabah

FinTech as a Disruptive Technology for Financial Institutions
It is a partnership contract in which one party provides the capital, whereas the other party (known as ‘Mudarib’) provides labour and expertise in running the partnership.
Published in Chapter:
Blockchain for Islamic Financial Services Institutions: The Case of Sukuk Financing
Fatima Zaka (Information Technology University, Pakistan) and Shazib Ehsan Shaikh (Information Technology University, Pakistan)
Copyright: © 2019 |Pages: 22
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-5225-7805-5.ch011
Abstract
By enabling better traceability of funds against specific assets, technologies should appeal to a significant segment of the lending market – one that is religiously conscientious. Such Islamic FinTechs should therefore be disruptive for the existing regime of Islamic financial services institutions who have problems managing credit risk and compliance. Islamic financial instruments are no stranger to controversy. It emerged from the scandals that gaining investor confidence for Islamic financial instruments such as the Sukuk, which is the Islamic alternative to bonds and securities, investors demand more transparency in Sukuk to make sure they are Shariah-compliant, thus making traceability to assets a special hindrance to current schemes of Sukuk. In this chapter, the authors will discuss how technology could be disruptive in Islamic banking and finance sector keeping Sukuk as a case. The authors will further elaborate on it by discussing the proposed model of blockchain that could solve the issue of traceability which could also boost investor confidence in Sukuk.
Full Text Chapter Download: US $37.50 Add to Cart
More Results
Ownership Risk in Contemporary Islamic Banking
A joint venture agreement in which one party (capital provider or rabb al-mal ) invests with capital and the other party (entrepreneur or mudarib ) invests with his skill or labor. The profit of the venture is shared according to a pre-agreed ratio, while the entire loss is born by the capital provider unless it was due to negligence of the entrepreneur.
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Governance and Financial Reporting of Islamic Banks: Evidence From Mauritius
A contract between a capital provider and a skilled entrepreneur whereby the former will contribute capital to an enterprise which is managed by the entrepreneur.
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Innovation in Takaful: The Musharakataan Business Model
A kind of partnership where one partner provides the capital, called the rabb-ul-maal , and the other partner, called the Mudarib , provides the expertise and management.
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Application of Maqasid al-Shariah-Based Public Policy Framework in SDGs Policies: Poverty Eradication (SDG 1) as a Case Study
Is a kind of partnership in business where one partner gives money to another for investing it in a commercial enterprise. The investment comes from one partner and the expertise and management come from the other partner. They share profits based on agreed upon percentages/ratio.
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