Islamic banking in India: Challenges and prospects
February 1, 2009 by SAF Desk
Filed under News at a glance
By Syed Burhanur Rahman
After discussing the different principles of Islamic banking, this is an attempt to explore the feasibility of Sharia banking in India. The rise of “interest” as a blood sapping social evil is alarming. To get rid of this menace and save the nation from the clutches of interest, suitable amendments should be made in the Banking Act. Indira Gandhi’s slogan, “Garibi Hatao” and “Roti,Kapda Aur Makaan” as enunciated by Zulfikar Ali Bhutto are still relevant today as it was in the early seventies. Yet even today, horrendous disparities exist between different segments of the Indian society. The majority of the unorganized sector; workers, semi-skilled persons, small farmers are all non-bankable. .Access to finance by the poor and the vulnerable groups is a prerequisite for poverty reduction and social cohesion. Such “financial apartheid” is one of the main causes of exclusion of the majority of the population in terms of growth. Government must provide the disadvantaged classes with the tools they need to improve their condition.The Indian banking sector has opened up considerably in the past decade or so and openness to interest-free banks is a logical next step. Islamic banking is one way to ameliorate the disadvantaged classes. The potential benefits of allowing Islamic banking include; decreased economic disparity between the haves and the have nots, better integration, and consequently accelerated economic growth. Government of India can leap a step closer towards the fulfillment of Indira Gandhi’s much cherished dream of “Garibi Hatao” by reforming its banking sector and allowing the establishment of Islamic Banks.

