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Islamic Finance in the Light of Modern Economic Theory [electronic resource] / by Suren Basov, M. Ishaq Bhatti.

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublisher: London : Palgrave Macmillan UK : Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan, 2016Edition: 1st ed. 2016Description: XIII, 173 p. 2 illus. online resourceContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9781137286628
Subject(s): Additional physical formats: Printed edition:: No title; Printed edition:: No title; Printed edition:: No titleDDC classification:
  • 330.1
LOC classification:
  • HB1-846.8
Online resources:
Contents:
Part I. Islamic finance: rationale, history, instruments and the legal framework -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Islamic financial instruments -- 3. Historical roots and evolution of Islamic financial thought -- Part II. Law of unexpected consequences -- 4. The incidence of taxation -- 5. Basics of Corporate Finance: Miller-Modigliani (MM) Theorem -- Part III. Game theory and mechanism design -- 6. Game theory -- 7. Revelation Principle -- 8. Monopolistic Screening -- 9. The multi-dimensional screening model -- Part IV. Mechanism design applications to Islamic finance -- 10. Business loans, trust and contract restriction faced by Islamic banks -- 11. Loans provision and adverse selection within orthodox religious communities -- 12. Shariah compliance and risk-inventive trade-offs -- 13. Shariah compliance, positive assortative matching and performance of Islamic financial institutions -- 14. Optimal Incentives for Takaful operators. 15. When short-selling prohibition can be optimal? -- Part V. Conclusions.
In: Springer Nature eBookSummary: This book provides researchers and students with an understanding of the basic legal tenets of the Islamic finance industry, studying the real economic effects of those tenets using the tools of the modern economic theory. Split into four parts, the book begins with an introduction to the history and a legal framework for Islamic banking, covering typical Islamic financial products such as Sukuk and Takaful and examining the structure of Islamic financial institutions. It then analyzes and discusses the Miller-Modigliani Theorem, which is of direct relevance to Islamic banks which are prohibited to charge interest and often have to rely of profit-loss sharing agreements. Part III of the book introduces the reader to modern mechanism design theory, paying particular attention to optimal contracting under hidden action and hidden information, and final part of the book applies the tools of economic theory to understand performance of Islamic financial institutions such as Islamic banks and Takaful operators. Islamic Finance in Light of Modern Economic Theory brings together all the necessary technical tools for analyzing the economic effects of Islamic frameworks and can be used as an advanced textbook for graduate students who wish to specialize in the area, as a reference for researchers and as a tool to help economists improve the design of Islamic financial institutions. .
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Holdings
Item type Home library Collection Call number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
E-Book E-Book Biblioteca Digital Colección SPRINGER 330.1 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Not For Loan
Total holds: 0

Part I. Islamic finance: rationale, history, instruments and the legal framework -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Islamic financial instruments -- 3. Historical roots and evolution of Islamic financial thought -- Part II. Law of unexpected consequences -- 4. The incidence of taxation -- 5. Basics of Corporate Finance: Miller-Modigliani (MM) Theorem -- Part III. Game theory and mechanism design -- 6. Game theory -- 7. Revelation Principle -- 8. Monopolistic Screening -- 9. The multi-dimensional screening model -- Part IV. Mechanism design applications to Islamic finance -- 10. Business loans, trust and contract restriction faced by Islamic banks -- 11. Loans provision and adverse selection within orthodox religious communities -- 12. Shariah compliance and risk-inventive trade-offs -- 13. Shariah compliance, positive assortative matching and performance of Islamic financial institutions -- 14. Optimal Incentives for Takaful operators. 15. When short-selling prohibition can be optimal? -- Part V. Conclusions.

This book provides researchers and students with an understanding of the basic legal tenets of the Islamic finance industry, studying the real economic effects of those tenets using the tools of the modern economic theory. Split into four parts, the book begins with an introduction to the history and a legal framework for Islamic banking, covering typical Islamic financial products such as Sukuk and Takaful and examining the structure of Islamic financial institutions. It then analyzes and discusses the Miller-Modigliani Theorem, which is of direct relevance to Islamic banks which are prohibited to charge interest and often have to rely of profit-loss sharing agreements. Part III of the book introduces the reader to modern mechanism design theory, paying particular attention to optimal contracting under hidden action and hidden information, and final part of the book applies the tools of economic theory to understand performance of Islamic financial institutions such as Islamic banks and Takaful operators. Islamic Finance in Light of Modern Economic Theory brings together all the necessary technical tools for analyzing the economic effects of Islamic frameworks and can be used as an advanced textbook for graduate students who wish to specialize in the area, as a reference for researchers and as a tool to help economists improve the design of Islamic financial institutions. .

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