Islamic hire-purchase in Malaysian financial institutions: a comparative analytical study

Islamic hire-purchase (Ydrah wa-iqtind) is one of the latest innovative products of Islamic banks designed to meet the current demand and avoid certain risks in the financing of consumer durables and motor vehicles. No wonder, this transaction is not acknowledged in the classical jurisprudence, but...

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Main Author: Abdullah, Nurdianawati Irwani
Format: Monograph
Language:English
Published: 2005
Subjects:
Online Access:http://irep.iium.edu.my/76079/
http://irep.iium.edu.my/76079/1/76079_Islamic%20hire-purchase%20in%20Malaysian%20financial%20institutions.pdf
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author Abdullah, Nurdianawati Irwani
author_facet Abdullah, Nurdianawati Irwani
author_sort Abdullah, Nurdianawati Irwani
building IIUM Repository
collection Online Access
description Islamic hire-purchase (Ydrah wa-iqtind) is one of the latest innovative products of Islamic banks designed to meet the current demand and avoid certain risks in the financing of consumer durables and motor vehicles. No wonder, this transaction is not acknowledged in the classical jurisprudence, but contemporary scholars have developed its structure through a careful combination of Yarah and sale contracts. In Malaysia, this concept refers to AI-Ijdrah Thumma Al-Bay'(AITAB) and it has grown in popularity and continuously expanded partly due to the heightened demand by customers. Since its first inception more than 10 years ago, AITAB has been governed by the Hire-Purchase Act 1967 (HPA), but HPA has received much criticism amongst the practitioners and Shadah experts, who assert the insufficiency of HPA to govern the AITAB transaction when dealing with Shadah issues. Consequently, Mu'amalah Hire-Purchase Bill has been proposed to the Malaysian government to overcome certain limitations of HPA. This study aims to examine the Islamic hire-purchase operation and its regulatory framework in Malaysia. Thorough examination and analysis would help identifying potential strengths and weaknessesin herent in the HPA and how the proposed Bill could provide remedies to various impediments, and offer an alternative regulation to govern the Islamic hire-purchase transaction. To illuminate our understanding of the actual operation of Islamic hire-purchase, this study incorporates in-depth interviews together with a questionnaire survey. A total of 46 in-depth interviews have been conducted on Islamic bankers, SharVah advisors, Shadah scholars, economists, legal experts and government officers. This is further complemented by a country-wide questionnaire survey successfully obtained from 203 customers, aiming at eliciting their perceptions and expectations towards Islamic hire-purchase products. The combination of theoretical discussion on Islamic hire-purchase together with the empirical surveys using both qualitative and quantitative methodology have proved to yield a valuable insight into the revaluation of the Malaysian regulatory system of AITAB. The findings of this study reveal the need to incorporate SharTah principles into the existing Hire-Purchase Act 1967, instead of establishing an independent SharTah law to govern the Islamic hire-purchase operation. It also reveals that customers of Islamic financial institutions in Malaysia have positive views of ArFAB.
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spelling iium-760792021-07-14T03:08:45Z http://irep.iium.edu.my/76079/ Islamic hire-purchase in Malaysian financial institutions: a comparative analytical study Abdullah, Nurdianawati Irwani BP140 Islamic law (Fiqh) HG3368 Islamic Banking and Finance HG4001 Financial management. Business finance. Corporation finance. JF491 Legislation. Legislative process. Law-making KBP1 Islamic law.Shariah.Fiqh Islamic hire-purchase (Ydrah wa-iqtind) is one of the latest innovative products of Islamic banks designed to meet the current demand and avoid certain risks in the financing of consumer durables and motor vehicles. No wonder, this transaction is not acknowledged in the classical jurisprudence, but contemporary scholars have developed its structure through a careful combination of Yarah and sale contracts. In Malaysia, this concept refers to AI-Ijdrah Thumma Al-Bay'(AITAB) and it has grown in popularity and continuously expanded partly due to the heightened demand by customers. Since its first inception more than 10 years ago, AITAB has been governed by the Hire-Purchase Act 1967 (HPA), but HPA has received much criticism amongst the practitioners and Shadah experts, who assert the insufficiency of HPA to govern the AITAB transaction when dealing with Shadah issues. Consequently, Mu'amalah Hire-Purchase Bill has been proposed to the Malaysian government to overcome certain limitations of HPA. This study aims to examine the Islamic hire-purchase operation and its regulatory framework in Malaysia. Thorough examination and analysis would help identifying potential strengths and weaknessesin herent in the HPA and how the proposed Bill could provide remedies to various impediments, and offer an alternative regulation to govern the Islamic hire-purchase transaction. To illuminate our understanding of the actual operation of Islamic hire-purchase, this study incorporates in-depth interviews together with a questionnaire survey. A total of 46 in-depth interviews have been conducted on Islamic bankers, SharVah advisors, Shadah scholars, economists, legal experts and government officers. This is further complemented by a country-wide questionnaire survey successfully obtained from 203 customers, aiming at eliciting their perceptions and expectations towards Islamic hire-purchase products. The combination of theoretical discussion on Islamic hire-purchase together with the empirical surveys using both qualitative and quantitative methodology have proved to yield a valuable insight into the revaluation of the Malaysian regulatory system of AITAB. The findings of this study reveal the need to incorporate SharTah principles into the existing Hire-Purchase Act 1967, instead of establishing an independent SharTah law to govern the Islamic hire-purchase operation. It also reveals that customers of Islamic financial institutions in Malaysia have positive views of ArFAB. 2005 Monograph NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en http://irep.iium.edu.my/76079/1/76079_Islamic%20hire-purchase%20in%20Malaysian%20financial%20institutions.pdf Abdullah, Nurdianawati Irwani (2005) Islamic hire-purchase in Malaysian financial institutions: a comparative analytical study. Technical Report. UNSPECIFIED.
spellingShingle BP140 Islamic law (Fiqh)
HG3368 Islamic Banking and Finance
HG4001 Financial management. Business finance. Corporation finance.
JF491 Legislation. Legislative process. Law-making
KBP1 Islamic law.Shariah.Fiqh
Abdullah, Nurdianawati Irwani
Islamic hire-purchase in Malaysian financial institutions: a comparative analytical study
title Islamic hire-purchase in Malaysian financial institutions: a comparative analytical study
title_full Islamic hire-purchase in Malaysian financial institutions: a comparative analytical study
title_fullStr Islamic hire-purchase in Malaysian financial institutions: a comparative analytical study
title_full_unstemmed Islamic hire-purchase in Malaysian financial institutions: a comparative analytical study
title_short Islamic hire-purchase in Malaysian financial institutions: a comparative analytical study
title_sort islamic hire-purchase in malaysian financial institutions: a comparative analytical study
topic BP140 Islamic law (Fiqh)
HG3368 Islamic Banking and Finance
HG4001 Financial management. Business finance. Corporation finance.
JF491 Legislation. Legislative process. Law-making
KBP1 Islamic law.Shariah.Fiqh
url http://irep.iium.edu.my/76079/
http://irep.iium.edu.my/76079/1/76079_Islamic%20hire-purchase%20in%20Malaysian%20financial%20institutions.pdf