Islamic nanocredit scheme: breaking free from debt traps of moneylender / Dr. Zuraidah Mohamed Isa, Dr. Dahlia Ibrahim and Zaiful Affendi Ahmad Zabib
Learning from issues in a few developing countries, such as how individuals, especially the poor, demand credit to meet their everyday needs, working capital for their small-scale enterprises, and loans from relatives and friends, it indirectly insists on the need for organised financial inclusion....
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Universiti Teknologi MARA, Kedah
2023
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Credit. Debt. Loans Financial management. Business finance. Corporation finance Mohamed Isa, Zuraidah Ibrahim, Dahlia Ahmad Zabib, Zaiful Affendi Islamic nanocredit scheme: breaking free from debt traps of moneylender / Dr. Zuraidah Mohamed Isa, Dr. Dahlia Ibrahim and Zaiful Affendi Ahmad Zabib |
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Learning from issues in a few developing countries, such as how individuals, especially the poor, demand credit to meet their everyday needs, working capital for their small-scale enterprises, and loans from relatives and friends, it indirectly insists on the need for organised financial inclusion. Furthermore, the emergence of problems with moneylender issue is also another signal to introduce a reliable and organised structure of financial inclusion institution. In conjunction to the issue of moneylender, a few studies have shown that these poor prefer moneylenders due to limited access to microfinance programmes. According to Mallick (2012), borrowers of microfinance programmes resort to moneylenders for additional funds due to a lack of availability, Microfinance institutions' inability to provide seasonal working capital, and a tight repayment schedule, all of which push up demand for moneylender loans. Similarly, Siyongwana (2004) discovered that a lack of access to microfinance has contributed to individuals turning to moneylenders. Besides that, a study in India and Philippines reported that even small-scale entrepreneurs are relying on moneylenders (Karlan et al., 2019). In essence, moneylender activity continues to thrive. Many countries, including Malaysia, Thailand, Indonesia, Bangladesh, and others, are experiencing an increase in the problem. Who is moneylender? What motivates people especially the poor to resort to moneylender? Why do the poor, in particular, continue to borrow from moneylenders despite having access to microcredit offered by banking and non-banking institutions? Why is it still relevant? These issues are critical to discuss. A moneylender is an individual or groups of people who offers interest-bearing loans to people. Moneylenders operate without any advertising or publicity, relying solely on customer support, with no questions asked. The customer simply come quietly, take the money, and leave. Despite the fact that the interest charged is usurious, which is illegal, to them it’s common and they satisfied. Is that it? Actually, some of the answers have already been addressed, for example Arnold and Booker (2013) reported in their study that the poor are satisfied with moneylenders' service because moneylenders can provide them with short-term loans that can be used to repay formal credits. Furthermore, there are also studies that revealed the poor may resort to moneylenders when they are in need of liquidity to repay their microcredit debt (Rahman, 1999; Woolcock, 1999; Guerin et al., 2013). Also, another reason why the poor turn to moneylenders is the moneylenders' ability to provide fast and discreet loan access. According to a study by Birthal et al., (2017), smallholder dairy farmers prefer informal moneylenders to formal lenders because the process is less time consuming and flexible. The poor, in truth, are naïve borrowers. They invested in a project that would benefit from the loan after obtaining it. If the project fails, they will resort to moneylenders just to cover the debt. Therefore, there is a need to introduce a scheme that reliable financial inclusion to the poor. The new scheme should be able not only to meet their basic needs of life but may also bring a new concept that help underprivilege to access it easily to avoid them to return to moneylender. The new and yet innovation scheme must be developed to address and eradicate the poverty and helps the authority to restructure the society to fix the social and economic imbalances via Islamic approaches. |
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Mohamed Isa, Zuraidah Ibrahim, Dahlia Ahmad Zabib, Zaiful Affendi |
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Mohamed Isa, Zuraidah Ibrahim, Dahlia Ahmad Zabib, Zaiful Affendi |
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Mohamed Isa, Zuraidah |
title |
Islamic nanocredit scheme: breaking free from debt traps of moneylender / Dr. Zuraidah Mohamed Isa, Dr. Dahlia Ibrahim and Zaiful Affendi Ahmad Zabib |
title_short |
Islamic nanocredit scheme: breaking free from debt traps of moneylender / Dr. Zuraidah Mohamed Isa, Dr. Dahlia Ibrahim and Zaiful Affendi Ahmad Zabib |
title_full |
Islamic nanocredit scheme: breaking free from debt traps of moneylender / Dr. Zuraidah Mohamed Isa, Dr. Dahlia Ibrahim and Zaiful Affendi Ahmad Zabib |
title_fullStr |
Islamic nanocredit scheme: breaking free from debt traps of moneylender / Dr. Zuraidah Mohamed Isa, Dr. Dahlia Ibrahim and Zaiful Affendi Ahmad Zabib |
title_full_unstemmed |
Islamic nanocredit scheme: breaking free from debt traps of moneylender / Dr. Zuraidah Mohamed Isa, Dr. Dahlia Ibrahim and Zaiful Affendi Ahmad Zabib |
title_sort |
islamic nanocredit scheme: breaking free from debt traps of moneylender / dr. zuraidah mohamed isa, dr. dahlia ibrahim and zaiful affendi ahmad zabib |
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Universiti Teknologi MARA, Kedah |
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2023 |
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https://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/100565/1/100565.pdf https://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/100565/ |
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my.uitm.ir.1005652024-09-24T23:32:40Z https://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/100565/ Islamic nanocredit scheme: breaking free from debt traps of moneylender / Dr. Zuraidah Mohamed Isa, Dr. Dahlia Ibrahim and Zaiful Affendi Ahmad Zabib Mohamed Isa, Zuraidah Ibrahim, Dahlia Ahmad Zabib, Zaiful Affendi Credit. Debt. Loans Financial management. Business finance. Corporation finance Learning from issues in a few developing countries, such as how individuals, especially the poor, demand credit to meet their everyday needs, working capital for their small-scale enterprises, and loans from relatives and friends, it indirectly insists on the need for organised financial inclusion. Furthermore, the emergence of problems with moneylender issue is also another signal to introduce a reliable and organised structure of financial inclusion institution. In conjunction to the issue of moneylender, a few studies have shown that these poor prefer moneylenders due to limited access to microfinance programmes. According to Mallick (2012), borrowers of microfinance programmes resort to moneylenders for additional funds due to a lack of availability, Microfinance institutions' inability to provide seasonal working capital, and a tight repayment schedule, all of which push up demand for moneylender loans. Similarly, Siyongwana (2004) discovered that a lack of access to microfinance has contributed to individuals turning to moneylenders. Besides that, a study in India and Philippines reported that even small-scale entrepreneurs are relying on moneylenders (Karlan et al., 2019). In essence, moneylender activity continues to thrive. Many countries, including Malaysia, Thailand, Indonesia, Bangladesh, and others, are experiencing an increase in the problem. Who is moneylender? What motivates people especially the poor to resort to moneylender? Why do the poor, in particular, continue to borrow from moneylenders despite having access to microcredit offered by banking and non-banking institutions? Why is it still relevant? These issues are critical to discuss. A moneylender is an individual or groups of people who offers interest-bearing loans to people. Moneylenders operate without any advertising or publicity, relying solely on customer support, with no questions asked. The customer simply come quietly, take the money, and leave. Despite the fact that the interest charged is usurious, which is illegal, to them it’s common and they satisfied. Is that it? Actually, some of the answers have already been addressed, for example Arnold and Booker (2013) reported in their study that the poor are satisfied with moneylenders' service because moneylenders can provide them with short-term loans that can be used to repay formal credits. Furthermore, there are also studies that revealed the poor may resort to moneylenders when they are in need of liquidity to repay their microcredit debt (Rahman, 1999; Woolcock, 1999; Guerin et al., 2013). Also, another reason why the poor turn to moneylenders is the moneylenders' ability to provide fast and discreet loan access. According to a study by Birthal et al., (2017), smallholder dairy farmers prefer informal moneylenders to formal lenders because the process is less time consuming and flexible. The poor, in truth, are naïve borrowers. They invested in a project that would benefit from the loan after obtaining it. If the project fails, they will resort to moneylenders just to cover the debt. Therefore, there is a need to introduce a scheme that reliable financial inclusion to the poor. The new scheme should be able not only to meet their basic needs of life but may also bring a new concept that help underprivilege to access it easily to avoid them to return to moneylender. The new and yet innovation scheme must be developed to address and eradicate the poverty and helps the authority to restructure the society to fix the social and economic imbalances via Islamic approaches. Universiti Teknologi MARA, Kedah 2023-10-20 Book Section NonPeerReviewed text en https://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/100565/1/100565.pdf Islamic nanocredit scheme: breaking free from debt traps of moneylender / Dr. Zuraidah Mohamed Isa, Dr. Dahlia Ibrahim and Zaiful Affendi Ahmad Zabib. (2023) In: FBM INSIGHTS. Universiti Teknologi MARA, Kedah, Universiti Teknologi MARA, Kedah, pp. 19-20. ISBN 2716-599X |