Yahoo – AFP,
Sam Reeves, 27sep 2015
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Indonesia
has a Muslim population of around 225 million but this huge number
of faithful
has not translated into success for sharia banks (AFP Photo/Adek Berry)
|
Indonesian
teacher Nina Ramadhaniah hopes for "blessings from Allah" by opening
a sharia bank account -- the sort of pious customer the world's most-populous
Muslim-majority country is praying for as it launches an Islamic finance drive.
Indonesia,
Southeast Asia's biggest economy, has a Muslim population of around 225 million
but this huge number of faithful has not translated into success for sharia
banks, institutions required to do business in line with Islamic principles.
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Bank
Indonesia mosque, pictured
on the first day of the holy month of
Ramadan, in
Jakarta, in 2013 (AFP
Photo/Adek Berry)
|
Authorities
believe it is a good moment, with many Indonesians getting wealthier after
years of strong economic growth and an increasing trend towards piety across
broad sections of society.
Many of
those without bank accounts, estimated at about 40 percent of the population,
are soon expected to open one.
"The
situation is an opportunity for the Islamic banking business to get
bigger," said Nasirwan Ilyas, a senior official from the Islamic banking
division of the Financial Services Authority (OJK).
The OJK is
spearheading the drive, and unveiled a five-year roadmap earlier this year that
included plans to educate the public about sharia lenders and the establishment
of an Islamic finance committee to better manage the sector.
'Interest
is haram'
Key
features of sharia banking include the prohibition of interest on loans or
customer deposits, and a ban on investing in "non-Islamic"
businesses, such as those involving pork or alcohol.
For teacher
Ramadhaniah, who has an account with Indonesia's biggest Islamic lender, Bank
Syariah Mandiri, the ban on interest is a key attraction.
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Key
features of sharia banking include the prohibition of interest on loans
or
customer deposits (AFP Photo/Bay Ismoyo)
|
"Charging
interest is haram (against Islam), ill-gotten gains that will not bring me any
blessings from Allah," the 44-year-old told AFP. "I don't want to
live in sin."
Sharia
accounts often work on a "profit-and-loss sharing" model, meaning
customers get a windfall when the bank does well but can lose out when it does
badly.
There are
obvious disadvantages. Sharia lenders generally offer lower returns on
investments and their modest size often means they provide fewer services than
larger, conventional peers -- many shops are not equipped to accept their debit
cards.
Nevertheless,
Islamic banks have proven popular in recent years, with the sector expanding on
average more than 40 percent a year between 2008 and 2012, according to the
OJK.
The growth
came after laws were changed to make it easier to establish an Islamic bank,
and there are now a plethora of standalone sharia lenders, Islamic banking
units attached to conventional banks, and smaller Islamic financial
institutions in the countryside.
Growth in
the sector has lost steam due to a broader slowdown in the economy, which is
expanding at six-year lows -- giving authorities another reason to launch their
drive.
Islamic
mega-bank
Central to
the overhaul is a plan to set up a National Islamic Finance Committee this
year, to oversee the sector by bringing together representatives from different
government agencies and act as a contact point for potential foreign investors.
Currently
responsibility for the sector is spread around different bodies, such as the
OJK, the central bank and the finance ministry, according to the OJK's Ilyas.
It is
modelled after similar bodies in other countries, such as the International
Islamic Financial Centre in Malaysia, where the sector is already far more
developed as the government started supporting it some years ago.
In addition
to the OJK roadmap, the government has announced plans to merge the Islamic
banking subsidiaries of four state-owned banks to create an Islamic mega-bank,
which should be able to provide better services than the current Islamic
lenders.
![]() |
Sharia
lenders generally offer lower returns on investments and their modest
size
often means they provide fewer services than larger, conventional peers
(AFP
Photo/Bay Ismoyo)
|
While
observers have broadly welcomed the plans, they concede that many difficulties
remain.
Khalid
Howladar, Moody's global head of Islamic finance, said it would be "quite
a challenge" to grow the sector to a substantial level.
"The
market is growing faster than conventional but from a very low base," he
said, adding Islamic banks in Indonesia did not offer "substantive
competition" to their non-sharia peers.
But for
Ramadhaniah and a growing army of devout Indonesians with new-found spending
power, Islamic banks remain the only choice.
"I
really don't care that I'm not earning anything or getting lower returns on my
investments," she said. "I can live in peace."




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