Programmes that provide credit and savings services have been
promoted in recent years by governments, international development
organisations, local non-governmental organisations (NGOs) and
grassroots bodies as a key strategy for alleviating poverty in
low-income countries (and increasingly also within poor communities in
high income countries) and to help achieve the Millennium Development
Goals (MDGs). Indeed 2005 was designated as the “Year of Microcredit”
by the United Nations. At the same time there has been a proliferation
of institutions providing credit and loans services to poor or
disadvantaged sectors of the population. This has been accompanied by a
burgeoning literature evaluating the impact of such programmes and
offering advice to service providers on how credit and savings schemes
should be structured and programmes implemented.
However, very few of these initiatives have adhered to Islamic
financing principles even when their work is undertaken in largely
Muslim countries. Unsurprisingly, therefore, there is a dearth of
literature documenting the success or otherwise of Islamic microfinance
programmes. This, in turn, has meant that organisations wishing to
create microfinance initiatives that conform to Islamic financing
principles are faced with a distinct lack of guidance on how to
establish and implement microfinance programmes. A great opportunity
has been missed. Nevertheless, anecdotal evidence suggests that the
demand for microfinance services based on Islamic principles is great –
there are, after all, some 1.3 billion Muslims worldwide. In the
absence of successful microfinance programmes adhering to Islamic
financing principles many Islamic donors have tended to shy away from
such initiatives and concentrated instead on relief and rehabilitation
programmes thereby limiting the resources available to those
organisations wishing to implement Islamic microfinance programmes. At
the same time, many Muslims refrain from using financial services that
do not adhere to Islamic financing principles for fear of breaching
their religious beliefs – certainly there is anecdotal evidence to
suggest that the proportion of Muslims using financial services is less
than their non-Muslim counterparts. It would be reasonable to suppose,
therefore, that the growth and development of many Muslim owned small
businesses is constrained as a result of the unavailability of Islamic
financial services.
The purpose of this document is to
show how microfinance programmes based on Islamic financing principles
can be established. It is hoped that this may encourage the provision
of microfinance services that conform to Islamic financing principles
and eventually, of course, the use of these services by
microentrepreneurs. As well as providing a theoretical framework
outlining the tenets upon which Islamic financing is based, this
document provides practical advice on how such a programme may be
structured; guidelines that can be followed when implementing a
microfinance programme; as well as advice upon programme monitoring and
evaluation. The target audience is organisations that wish to provide
microfinance services that conform to Islamic financing principles.
This document is, primarily, a practical manual written from a
practitioner’s perspective.
Send your feedback on this material to
pru@islamic-relief.org.uk.