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Question: If you are of the view that
all the forms of interest are prohibited by Shar’i#ah,
then what procedure will you suggest for eliminating it from the economy?
If you prefer a gradual process, what strategy do you suggest for the purpose
which may fulfil the requirements of the Holy Qur’a#n
and the Sunnah?
Answer: The way the Qur’a#n eradicated evils as intoxication and slavery is an ample proof of the fact that in case of an evil that has pervaded the society to the extent that immediate abolition carries the risk of causing further evil at individual or collective levels, gradual process of reform is in consonance with the spirit of Islam provided that this allowance is not misused (2:173; 6:140 & 16:115).* For some suggested strategies in this regard see Appendices 1 & 2. These strategies are suggestions at best, and any better strategy, so long as there is no conflict in it with the principles of Islam, may be adopted.
Among the required productive forces for the production of wealth are a variety of natural resources, science and technology, appropriate laws, law and order, a congenial environment for industry, commerce and services, a sense of proportion, and, above all, moral values. Setting up high-tech industries on borrowed funds, which industries benefit few at the cost of the interests of the majority can never be conducive to the progress of a nation, and no educated person should be fooled into believing that ensuring the nation the required assortment of resources at the cost of the interests of the selected few would be detrimental to the interest of the nation as a whole. Blocking resources through the requirement of collateral security and restricting them through interest rates not only kill true and indigenous entrepreneurship but also destroy the more elementary cultural and material advances that must pervade the economy to make good use of available facilities. As George Soule has put it:
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*. For further details,
see Shehzad Saleem, ‘The Condemnation of Slavery by Islam’, Renaissance,
V (March 1995), 3-8.
**. George Soule, Ideas of the Great Economists (New York: The New American Library of World Literature, Inc., 1960), p. 78. |