source:
http://www.middleeastwire.com:8080/storypage.jsp?id=7491
LONDON – Next month Malaysian Prime
Minister Dr. M
Idea of Islamic dinar gaining momentum
Publisher: ArabNews.com
By: Mushtak
Parker
Posted: 2002-05-13
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The
two-day seminar, scheduled to be held on June 25-26 in Kuala Lumpur under
the patronage of the Institute of Islamic Thought, a Malaysian think tank,
hopes to bring together a cornucopia of central bank officials,
economists, bankers, businessmen, academics and other interested parties.
Dr. Mahathir, who is also the country’s finance minister, first
mooted the idea of an Islamic gold dinar as a standard unit of currency
for trade and financial transactions between the 54 member countries of
the Jeddah-based trans-national Islamic Development Bank (IDB), last year.
This in the aftermath of the currency crisis that hit the Asian countries,
including Malaysia, so badly in 1999 and in 2000.
The Malaysian
premier, whose government is the most proactive supporter of Islamic
finance in the world and which has instituted a dual banking policy, a
conventional system operating side-by-side with an Islamic one,
cooperating but not interacting, has already hosted a domestic convention
on the subject.
The volatility in the currency markets still
persist today, and the Muslim countries, many of whom are primary
commodities producers, are perhaps amongst those that are most affected.
World commodity prices including crude oil, natural gas, palm oil, natural
rubber, rice, tea and so on, are quoted on the commodity and futures
exchanges in the US dollar.
Not surprisingly, many of the Muslim
currencies including the Malaysian ringgit, the Saudi riyal, the Kuwaiti
dinar, the UAE dirham, have traditionally been pegged to the US greenback.
Malaysia was forced to go down this route in 1999, following the Asian
crisis which saw the US dollar and other international currencies such as
the Japanese yen and sterling sharply appreciate against the ringgit.
However, pegging your currency to a strong international currency such as
the US dollar has its upside and downside. When the dollar is strong, then
those currencies tracking the dollar, similarly remain strong relative to
the other international currencies.
But the greenback itself can
be susceptible and has crashed against a clutch of currencies three times
in the last two decades in 1985, 1988, and according to some analysts, is
currently in the process of decline. So much so that some bankers in
London confirm that already US investors are moving into non-dollar
assets. Falling US share prices and the steady rise in the price of gold,
are two other signs that the once-mighty dollar is on the decline and
confidence in US-backed assets is on the decrease. Even the once-troubled
euro last week closed at a healthy 92 US cents, almost 10 percent up on
its all-time low in October 2000.
Some European central banks are
already having to cut interest rates to stem a rush of abandoning the US
dollar into their currencies. Part of the problem is that the US economic
recovery post 9/11 is an artificially engineered one, and one fueled
largely by a flood of foreign funds — currently about $400 billion a year,
and projected to rise to a staggering $800 billion a year within four
years, if the dollar does not fall. America in a nutshell is living beyond
its means. It is spending more than it is saving, and borrowing the
balance from abroad.
Various economists over the last few decades,
following the Bretton Woods agreement after the World War II and the
abandonment of the gold standard, have hankered romantically for a return
to a new gold standard or its 21st century equivalent. Is Dr. Mahathir’s
call for an Islamic gold dinar unit of currency a mere coincidence, in
this respect?
It certainly is not a new idea. Several Muslim
economists and prominent Shariah compliance experts have called for such a
unit of currency in the past or some sort of return to a gold standard.
In fact, the Islamic dinar does already exist as the unit of
currency of the Islamic Development Bank (IDB). But the IDB’s dinar is
also indirectly pegged to the US dollar, because one Islamic dinar is
equivalent to one special drawing rights (SDR) of the International
Monetary Fund (IMF), which needless to say, is quoted in the US dollar. As
such the US dollar remains the de facto unit of currency of the IDB even
if its accounts and internal accounting is presented in Islamic dinars.
How pragmatic or efficacious is Dr. Mahathir’s suggestion for the
establishment of the Islamic dinar?
Malaysia in terms of
innovating payments arrangements between developing countries, has set
some notable precedents. It was Dr. Mahathir’s current economic adviser,
Tan Sri Nor Mohammed Yakcop, also the architect of Malaysia’s Islamic
banking system, who pioneered the bilateral payments arrangement (BPA),
whereby Malaysia could settle its trading accounts with individual
emerging countries such as Chile, Algeria, and Iran, through the two
respective central banks, without the involvement of costly correspondent
banks in London, New York or Frankfurt. The two countries would allocate a
small group of banks in their respective countries to handle the trade
transactions which would then be settled between the two central banks on
an annual basis.
When Yakcop suggested to expand the BPA into a
multilateral payments arrangement (MPA), which was due to be discussed at
the Group of 77 developing countries summit in New Delhi in the mid-1990s,
it was the mighty IMF that intervened and warned Malaysia that any
adoption of the MPA would constitute a contravention of IMF membership
rules. The Fund swiftly dispatched a delegation to Kuala Lumpur to press
home the implicit threat, and the suggestion never made it on to the G-77
agenda.
Tan Sri Nor never could hide his disappointment over the
sidelining of the MPA. Today, he is spearheading an urgent review of
Malaysia’s serious corporate debt restructuring situation.
As to
the pragmatism or efficacy of the Mahathir suggestion, it is highly
unlikely that an Islamic dinar unit of exchange between Muslim countries
would take off, at least under present circumstances. Economic
disparities; lack of capital markets formation; weak currencies; lack of
economic liberalization and reforms; lack of political consensus and unity
amongst the Muslim countries; dependence on primary commodities such as
oil, gas, palm oil, rice, tea, etc. – these are all factors that would
seriously delay any successful implementation of an Islamic dinar unit of
exchange.