Islamic finance
could help to boost trade between Cambodia and the Middle East, as well as
attract investment from Muslim-majority countries, experts said on Saturday.
Knowledge of Islamic finance and banking, which bars interest lending
and discourages unfair trade advantages, is almost nonexistent among Cambodia’s
Muslims, which comprise about 2 per cent of the country’s population.
But demand for halal business practices is increasing in Malaysia and
Middle Eastern countries, according to insiders.
With more education on Islamic law, domestic Muslims could dominate
trade with those countries and attract investment from Islamic banks in the
region, experts and Muslim business owners said.
“Most investors in the Middle East are certainly looking for
Islamic-compliant business in countries that aren’t majority Muslim,” Ashraf Bin
Md Hashim, head of consultancy at the International Shari’ah Research Academy
for Islamic Finance, said on Saturday on the sidelines of Cambodia’s first
conference on halal finance.
“This could open an Islamic banking window here.”
Progress on Islamic finance in Malaysia has been slow, Ashraf Bin Md
Hashim said.
Banking without interest earnings has made for a difficult pitch to
investors and much more time and fine tuning are needed to generate profits
that adhere to the Quran, Islam’s holy text.
Still, 23 per cent of Malaysia’s banking sector and 80 per cent of its
bond market comply with Islamic law, according to Ashraf Bin Md Hashim.
The Islamic Bank of Thailand is preparing to launch it first Islamic,
or Sukuk, bond in Thailand.
An edge in trade with predominantly Muslim countries would be a boon
for the Cham, a predominantly Muslim ethnic group in Cambodia, who generally
have a lower standard of living than their Khmer countrymen, said Ahmad Yahya,
a secretary of state at the Ministry of Social Affairs and a member of the Cham
community.
“If we look at the Muslim population in Cambodia, we don’t have
anything … In business, we have to start from the bottom. We need more
resources,” he said on Saturday.
About 400,000 Cham live in Cambodia, the Post reported in August.
Islamic finance would most likely first appear in Cambodia in the form
of microfinance, and there are plans to open a microfinance institution that
would not collect interest on loans, Cambodian Intelligent Investor Organisation
CEO Sles Nazy said.
The CIIO hosted Saturday’s conference.
Compliant MFIs would invest in small businesses and properties as
opposed to lending money to investors.
Instead of earning interest from loans, the institutions would take a
predetermined share of profit or loss.
Halal MFIs would also allow the Kingdom’s Muslims to live closer to
Islamic Law, a resource that Sles Nazy said the community wants.
“There’s a demand from the Muslim community here. I have seen some
problems because right now Muslims can’t follow Islamic law when they borrow
money, even if they want to,” he said.
While some Cham attendees at Saturday’s conference expressed confusion
over how they could take loans without paying interest, others said Islamic
finance in Cambodia would benefit their businesses.
Mat Fasy, whose company imports halal food from Middle Eastern
countries, said business between Cambodia and the Middle East is small at
present but had potential to grow, especially in commodities trade such as rice
and rubber.
An understanding of Islamic business practices is essential to
furthering trade in the Middle East, according to Mat Fasy.
Muslim-run businesses in Cambodia could attract financing from Islamic
banks in Southeast Asia if a better understanding of the practices was
developed, said Sulaiman Muhammad, who imports halal food from Malaysia.
“Muslim companies in Cambodia are short on capital. If there was more
Islamic finance here, Islamic banks in Malaysia might invest in our companies,”
he said.
Don Weinland
Business & Investment Opportunities
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