History
Some of the first Islamic financial institutions to have a Sharia Boards were the Faisal Islamic Bank of Egypt, (founded in 1976); the Jordan Islamic Bank, (founded in 1978); the Sudanese Faisal Islamic Bank (founded in 1978); the Kuwaiti House of Finance (founded in 1979).Requirements
According to Juan Solé, "the first measure" that an institution wishing to offer Islamic products "must undertake, is to appoint a Sharia board or, at a very minimum, a Sharia counselor". According to Nizam Yaquby, one of the most important "required conditions" for a conventional bank entering Islamic banking is "the existence of a Sharia supervisory board". Sharia Boards have "both supervisory and consultative functions" — reviewing the operations of their financial institution to make sure they comply with the Sharia (sometimes called “Sharia auditing”), and answering questions (of their institution's staff) on whether or not some proposed transactions or products follows the Sharia and giving a ''`A Shariah Supervisory Board (SSB) is an independent body of specialized jurists in '' fiqh al-mu'amalat'' (Islamic commercial jurisprudence) ... The Shariah Supervisory Board is entrusted with the duty of directing, reviewing and supervising the activities of the Islamic financial institution ... The fatwas (legal opinions) and ruling of the Board shall be binding.` Khan, ''What Is Wrong with Islamic Economics?'', 2013: p.315AAOIFI 2005. ''Accounting, auditing and governance standards for Islamic financial institutions.'' Manana, Bahrain: Accounting and Auditing Organization for Islamic Financial InstitutionsThis includes: : a. certifying financial instruments for their compliance with the Shariah; : b. verifying transactions for compliance with the Shariah; : c. calculating zakah payable by Islamic financial institutions; : d. disposing of non-shariah-compliant income; : e. advising on the distribution of income among investors and shareholders.Grais, Wafik and Matteo Pellegrini. 2006. ''Corporate governance and Shari'ah compliance in institutions offering Islamic financial services.'' Policy research working paper 4054, November. Washington, DC: World Bank., p.7 Khan, ''What Is Wrong with Islamic Economics?'', 2013: p.316 According to the Institute of Islamic Banking and Insurance, a Sharia board must have at least three members. Faleel Jamaldeen states that in practice most Sharia boards have three to six members, with one chair and one general secretariat. He notes that one Sharia board (at HSBC Amanah) had regional committees for Malaysia, Saudi Arabia, Indonesia, and Singapore to deal with the "spectrum of beliefs" across the Muslim world. Jamaldeen, ''Islamic Finance For Dummies'', 2012:265-6 A number of Sharia advisory firms have now emerged to offer Sharia advisory services to the institutions offering Islamic financial services. The World Database for Islamic Banking and Finance (WDIBF)by Fayaz Ahmad Lone has been developed to provide information about all the websites related to this type of banking. In addition to the individual Sharia boards that every Islamic financial institution has, there are organizations that have issued guidelines and standards for Sharia-compliance: Accounting and Auditing Organization for Islamic Financial Institutions,AAOIFI. 2008. ''Governance standards. Shari'a supervisory board: Appointment, composition and report.'' Manana, Bahrain: Accounting and Auditing Organization for Islamic Financial Institutions.
Different countries
Though sharing a common objective, Sharia boards in different jurisdictions around the Muslim world differ "in issues of methods of appointment, composition of members, and legal status of the ruling, internal supervision", among other things. The AAOIFI works to bring harmony to all this, according to researcher Mohammad Abdullah Nadwi. Since the advent of modern Islamic banking, the work of the Sharia boards has become more standardized. According to Nadwi, writing in 2012, in "most" Muslim majority countries "some industry-oriented non-governmental bodies" set the requirements for SSBs. According to Ibrahim Warde, one such body is theChallenges
Some Islamic Banking observers believe the industry suffers from handpicked, highly paid Sharia experts approving financial products that have resorted to '' ḥiyal'' (legal stratagem) to follow Sharia law, "shunning controversial issues", or "rubber stamping" bank management decisions after perfunctory reviews. Warde, ''Islamic finance in the global economy'', 2000: p.227 Khan, ''What Is Wrong with Islamic Economics?'', 2013: p.318 and that the banking practices approved by this small number of Islamic jurists have moved closer and closer to the practices of conventional non-Islamic banking. El-Gamal, ''Islamic Finance'', 2006: p.34"Fatwa shopping"
Journalist John Foster notes that "top scholars" often earn "six-figure sums" for each ''“We create the same type of products that we do for the conventional markets. We then phone up a Sharia scholar for a Fatwa ... If he doesn't give it to us, we phone up another scholar, offer him a sum of money for his services and ask him for a Fatwa. We do this until we get Sharia compliance. Then we are free to distribute the product as Islamic.”According to Foster, this practice of shopping for an Islamic scholar who will issue a fatwa testifying that a banking product obeys
Independence
Researchers have also questioned of the independence of and conflicts of interest with Sharia supervisory boards (SSBs) whose employment and compensation is determined by the same institutions (via its board of directors acting on behalf of the shareholders) whose bottom line the SSB's fatawa can make an enormous difference upon. At least one study has found that this arrangement "compromise(s) the independence of the SSB", Warde, ''Islamic finance in the global economy'', 2000: p.236 while another found Islamic financial institutions do "not have practices which ensure transparency in the role and functions of the SSBs".Grais, Wafik and Matteo Pellegrini. 2006. ''Corporate governance and Shari'ah compliance in institutions offering Islamic financial services.'' Policy research working paper 4054, November. Washington, DC: World Bank., p.12 ;Scarcity Another issue is the need for Sharia supervisors to be trained in both Islamic commercial law and contemporary financial practices, the scarcity of such people, and the high prices they command as a result. The most popular/highly regarded Sharia supervisors end up working for many institutions, including competitors—one study found the busiest Sharia scholar held 85 positions in Islamic financial institutions and 12 positions in standard-setting bodies, and the top 20 scholars holding 621 Sharia board positions,—creating potential conflicts of interest. Khan, ''What Is Wrong with Islamic Economics?'', 2013: p.316-7 The scarcity also bids up fees. Two researchers noted the small group of Sharia experts "earn as much as US$88,500 per year per bank" and can "charge up to US$500,000 for advice on large capital market transactions."Khan, M Mansoor and M Ishaq Bhatti. 2008. ''Developments in Islamic banking: the case of Pakistan''. Houndmills, Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan. p.71see also: Hasan, Zubair. 2009. Islamic finance education at the graduate level: Current state and challenges. ''Islamic Economic Studies'' 16 (1, 2) (January): 96 This raises the question of whether what one writer calls "alliance of wealth and Shari'ah scholarship" has been created and led Sharia supervisors into what another writer calls "certain changes in viewpoint" resulting in "over-stretching the rules of Shariah".Foster, John. 2008. Curb your Enthusiasm. ''Islamic Business and Finance'' 28 (March) 11-13.This alliance also gives the Ulema (religious scholars) a new source of income that by far exceeds what they were used to earning. It gives them an opening to a new lifestyle that includes air travel, sometimes in private jets, staying in five-star hotels, being under the focus of media attention and providing their opinions to people of high social and economic ranks, who are anxious to listen. In addition, they are frequently commissioned to undertake paid-for ''fiqh ''Fiqh'' (; ar, فقه ) is Islamic jurisprudence. Muhammad-> Companions-> Followers-> Fiqh. The commands and prohibitions chosen by God were revealed through the agency of the Prophet in both the Quran and the Sunnah (words, deeds, and ...'' (jurisprudence) research and to find solutions to problems that the new breed of bankers face.Kahf, Monzer. 2004. Islamic banks: The rise of a new power alliance of wealth and Shari'ah scholarship. In ''The politics of Islamic finance,'' ed. Clement Henry and Rodney Wilson, p.26. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. Khan, ''What Is Wrong with Islamic Economics?'', 2013: p.317
See also
* Islamic banking and finance * Sharia investmentsReferences
Notes
Citations
Books, documents, journal articles
* * * * * * * * * * * {{Cite book , last1=Warde , first1=Ibrahim , title=Islamic finance in the global economy , location=Edinburgh , publisher=Edinburgh University Press , orig-year=2000, year=2010 , url=https://books.google.com/books?id=diSlBgAAQBAJ&dq=Warde%2C+Ibrahim.+2000%2C+2010.+Islamic+finance+in+the+global+economy%2C&pg=PR4 , ref=IFGE2010, isbn=9780748627769External links