Description:
This paper discusses Islamic banking
products and interprets them in the context of financial
intermediation theory. Anecdotal evidence shows that many of
the conventional products can be redrafted as
Sharia-compliant products, so that the differences are
smaller than expected. Comparing conventional and Islamic
banks and controlling for other bank and country
characteristics, the authors find few significant
differences in business orientation, efficiency, asset
quality, or stability. While Islamic banks seem more
cost-effective than conventional banks in a broad
cross-country sample, this finding reverses in a sample of
countries with both Islamic and conventional banks. However,
conventional banks that operate in countries with a higher
market share of Islamic banks are more cost-effective but
less stable. There is also consistent evidence of higher
capitalization of Islamic banks and this capital cushion
plus higher liquidity reserves explains the relatively
better performance of Islamic banks during the recent crisis.