This book explores several challenges facing Fin Tech in Islamic financial institutions. Firstly, large banks and financial institutions in countries with updated and innovative technological channels will earn the technology arbitrage from Fin Tech. This ‘size’ puzzle may create a challenge for Islamic financial institutions that are of smaller size and from technologically less-developed countries. Secondly, while access to Fin Tech is getting broader day by day, usage of Fin Tech is still limited due to personal and governance-related limitations. Moreover, the level of awareness of the emerging Fin Tech services (i.e., bitcoin, blockchain, etc.) remains extremely poor even among the residents of technologically-advanced countries. Thirdly, use of Fin Tech by Islamic financial institutions is limited to Islamic banking, to users from developed countries, among young customers, and for a limited number of traditional banking services such as the deposits and payment services. Also, banks hope to use Fin Tech to increase the size of a new breed of technology-savvy depositors and loan customers to achieve economies of scale, which may help stabilize the banking sector. Automation in Islamic banks and the participation of Islamic financial institutions in blockchain and bitcoin domains require extensive research from Shariah-compliance as well as market and consumer-related grounds. With all the opportunities and challenges of Fin Tech—promoting inclusion, easier loan monitoring, and risk of Shariah non-compliance—this book explores the implications for Islamic financial institutions and will be of interest to scholars, researchers, and students of Islamic finance and financial technology.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
1. Introduction to Islamic Fintech: a challenge or an opportunity.- 2. Fintech and the art of disruption.- 3. An artificial intelligence based Islamic Fintech model of Zakat.- 4. Islamic Fintech and Bahrain: An opportunity for global financial services.- 5. The future of finance and Fintech: Visualising the opportunities for Fintech in the MENA region.- 6. Fintech Trends: Industry 4.0, Islamic Fintech, and its Digital Transformation.- 7. An insight into the Fintech and Islamic finance literature: A bibliometric and visual analysis.- 8. Fintech Innovation and its Application in Islamic Banking from Pakistan.- 9. Fintech in the Islamic Banking Sector and Its Impact on the Stakeholders in the wake of COVID-19.- 10. Fintech and Islamic financial institutions: Applications and challenges.- 11. An Assessment of Level of Adoption of Fintech in Islamic Banks in the MENA Region.- 12. Fintech, Pandemic, and the Islamic Financial System: Innovative financial services and its Shariah compliance.-13. An Islamic Finance Perspective of Crowdfunding and Peer to Peer (P2P) Lending.- 14. Islamic Finance and Cryptocurrency: A Systematic Review.- 15. Islamic Fintech, Blockchain and Crowdfunding: current landscape and path forward.- 16. COVID-19 Challenges and the role of Islamic Fintech.
Über den Autor
M. Kabir Hassan is a Professor of Finance in the Department of Economics and Finance in the University of New Orleans, USA. He currently holds two endowed Chairs—Hibernia Professor of Economics and Finance, and Bank One Professor in Business. He is the winner of the 2016 Islamic Development Bank (IDB) Prize in Islamic Banking and Finance.
Mustafa Raza Rabbani is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Economics and Finance at the University of Bahrain and holds a Ph D in Banking and Financial Services from Jamia Millia Islamia University, India.
Mamunur Rashid is a Senior Lecturer in Finance at the Christ Church Business School, Canterbury Christ Church University, UK. Prior to joining CCCU, he taught Finance at University Brunei Darussalam, the University of Nottingham, and East West University for more than 17 years.