ID :
216194
Tue, 11/22/2011 - 10:46
Auther :
Shortlink :
https://www.oananews.org//node/216194
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Ar Rahnu Can Be Expanded Into An Important Islamic Financial Service Regionally
By Noor Bakhtiar Ahmad
LANGKAWI (Malaysia), Nov 22 (Bernama) -- The business of Ar Rahnu or pawn
services based on Syariah principles, can be expanded into an important Islamic
financial service in the region.
Making this call, Director of Centre for Graduate Studies, Universiti Tun
Abdul Razak (UNIRAZAK), Prof Dr Barjoyai Bardai, said for the plan to become a
reality, the scope of Ar Rahnu services should expand to cover all levels of the
society.
"Four groups of targets, namely the lower income group, youths, micro
business traders and major businesses -- all would have to be given attention in
the expansion of Ar Rahnu service as an Islamic financial service institute," he
said here on Tuesday.
Barjoyai was among the presenters of working papers at a workshop here today
on innovations in Ar Rahnu. The event was organised by YaPEIM, a foundation for
the development of Islamic economy in Malaysia.
Structural and practical changes would have to made in the methods of
services to ensure the success of such an expansion, Barjoyai said.
"Ar Rahnu services would have to be promoted as a community based service
seen as a convenient public facility for the liquidation of assets to tide over
a short term cash money requirement or in the event of an emergency.
"This would require the promotion of Ar Rahnu's image as a community service
for everyone and not just for the poor or desperate. Basically, customers would
have to be given the portrayal that the service is part of lifestyle.
An economist, Barjoyai said Ar Rahnu could also act as a financial institute
for working capital for micro traders.
"If Ar Rahnu institutes are able to accept land grants and house grants,
deposit inventory receipts, listed blue chip shares, intellectual properties,
receipts of gold investments in banks, and sales invoices to government bodies
and government linked companies as collateral, they would increasingly become
the choice for micro and macro businesses, as all this while the amount of loans
given were small and the pawned items were limited to gold," he said.
The two-day workshop which took off on Nov 21 saw 300 participants including
representatives from the regional Ar Rahnu secretariat from Malaysia, Indonesia,
Thailand, Brunei, Thailand, Cambodia and Timor Leste. They had gathered to share
their views and strategies to further beef up the Ar Rahnu micro credit
programmes in the region.
--BERNAMA
Malaysia