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A
Short Review of the Historical Critique of Usury
(Riba)
Wayne
A.M. Visser and Alastair McIntosh
Centre
for Human Ecology
First
published in Accounting, Business & Financial History, 8:2,
Routledge, London, July 1998, pp. 175-189
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
HISTORY OF THE CRITIQUE OF USURY
RATIONALE FOR THE CRITIQUE OF USURY
A MODERN APPLICATION OF USURY PROHIBITION
CONCLUSION
REFERENCES
ABSTRACT
Usury
- lending at interest or excessive interest - has, according to known
records, been practiced in various parts of the world for at least four
thousand years. During this
time, there is substantial evidence of intense criticisism by various
traditions, institutions and social reformers on moral, ethical,
religious and legal grounds. The
rationale employed by these wide-ranging critics have included arguments
about work ethic, social justice, economic instability, ecological
destruction and inter-generational equity.
While the contemporary relevance of these largely historical
debates are not analysed in detail, the authors contend that their
significance is greater than ever before in the context of the modern
interest-based global economy
Keywords:
usury, interest, debt, discounting, Islamic banking
INTRODUCTION
The
concept of “usury” has a long historical life, throughout most of
which it has been understood to refer to the
practice of charging financial interest in excess of the principle
amount of a loan, although in some instances and more especially in
more recent times, it has been interpreted as interest
above the legal or socially acceptable rate[i].
Accepting this broad definition for the moment, the practice of
usury can be traced back approximately four thousand years (Jain, 1929),
and during its subsequent history it has been repeatedly condemned,
prohibited, scorned and restricted, mainly on moral, ethical, religious
and legal grounds. Among
its most visible and vocal critics have been the religious institutions
of Hinduism, Buddhism, Judaism, Islam and Christianity.
To this list may be added ancient Western philosophers and
politicians, as well as various modern socio-economic reformers.
It is the objective of this paper to outline briefly the history
of this critique of usury, to examine reasons for its repeated
denouncement and, finally, to intuitively assess the relevance of these
arguments to today’s predominantly interest-based global economy.
The scope will not extend to a full exploration of some of the
proposed modern alternatives to usury, except to describe the growing
practice of Islamic banking as an example.
HISTORY
OF THE CRITIQUE OF USURY
Usury
in Hinduism and Buddhism
Among
the oldest known references to usury are to be found in ancient Indian
religious manuscripts and Jain (1929) provides an excellent summary of
these in his work on Indigenous
Banking in India. The
earliest such record derives from the Vedic
texts of Ancient India (2,000-1,400 BC) in which the “usurer” (kusidin)
is mentioned several times and interpreted as any lender at interest.
More frequent and detailed references to interest payment are to
be found in the later Sutra
texts (700-100 BC), as well as the Buddhist Jatakas
(600-400 BC). It is during
this latter period that the first sentiments of contempt for usury are
exressed. For example,
Vasishtha, a well known Hindu law-maker of that time, made a special law
which forbade the higher castes of Brahmanas
(priests) and Kshatriyas
(warriors) from being usurers or lenders at interest.
Also, in the Jatakas,
usury is referred to in a demeaning manner: “hypocritical ascetics are
accused of practising it”.
By
the second century AD, however, usury had become a more relative term,
as is implied in the Laws of Manu
of that time: “Stipulated
interest beyond the legal rate being against (the law), cannot be
recovered: they call that a
usurious way (of lending)” (Jain, 1929: 3-10).
This dilution of the concept of usury seems to have continued
through the remaining course of Indian history so that today, while it
is still condemned in principle, usury refers only to interest charged
above the prevailing socially accepted range and is no longer prohibited
or controlled in any significant way.
Usury
in Ancient Western Political Philosophy
Among
the Ancient Western philosophers who condemned usury can be named Plato,
Aristotle, the two Catos, Cicero, Seneca and Plutarch (Birnie, 1958).
Evidence that these sentiments found their concurrent
manifestation in the civil law of that period can be seen, for example,
from the Lex Genucia reforms
in Republican Rome (340 BC) which outlawed interest altogether.
Nevertheless, in practice, ways of evading such legislation were
found and by the last period of the Republic, usury was once again rife.
It was the Democratic party in Rome who rededicated themselves to
the cause of those suffering the burden of debt, and under the banner of
Julius Caesar, a ceiling on interest rates of 12% was set, and later
under Justinian, lowered even further to between 4% and 8% (Birnie,
1958). Clearly, this left
fertile ground for the assault on usury which the Church would mount
following its Christianisation of the Roman Empire.
Usury
in Islam
The
criticism of usury in Islam was well established during the Prophet
Mohammed's life and reinforced by various of his teachings in the Holy
Quran[ii]
dating back to around 600 AD. The
original word used for usury in this text was riba
which literally means “excess or addition”.
This was accepted to refer directly to interest on loans so that,
according to Islamic economists Choudhury and Malik (1992), by the time
of Caliph Ulmar, the prohibition of interest was a well established
working principle integrated into the Islamic economic system.
It is not true that this interpretation of usury has been
universally accepted or applied in the Islamic world. Indeed,
a school of Islamic thought which emerged in the 19th Century, led by
Sir Sayyed, still argues for a interpretative differentiation between
usury, which it is claimed refers to consumptional lending, and interest
which they say refers to lending for commercial investment (Ahmed,
1958). Nevertheless, there
does seem to be evidence in modern times for what Choudhury and Malik
describe as “a gradual evolution of the institutions of interest-free
financial enterprises across the world” (1992: 104).
They cite, for instance, the current existence of financial
institutions in Iran, Pakistan and Saudi Arabia, the Dar-al-Mal-al-Islami
in Geneva and Islamic trust companies in North America.
This growing practice of Islamic banking will be discussed more
fully in a later section as a modern application of usury prohibition.
Usury
in Judaism
Criticism
of usury in Judaism has its roots in several Biblical passages in which
the taking of interest is either forbidden, discouraged or scorned[iii].
The Hebrew word for interest is neshekh,
literally meaning "a bite" and is believed to refer to the
exaction of interest from the point of view of the debtor.
In the associated Exodus and Leviticus texts, the word almost
certainly applies only to lending to the poor and destitute, while in
Deuteronomy, the prohibition is extended to include all moneylending,
excluding only business dealings with foreigners.
In the levitical text, the words tarbit
or marbit are also used to
refer to the recovery of interest by the creditor.
In
addition to these biblical roots are various talmudic extensions of the
prohibitions of interest, known as avak
ribbit, literally "the dust of interest" which apply, for
example, to certain types of sales, rent and work contracts.
This is distinguished from rubbit
kezuzah, interest proper in an amount or at a rate agreed upon
between lender and borrower. The
difference in law is that the latter, if it has been paid by the
borrower to the the lender, is recoverable from the lender, while the
former, once paid, is not recoverable, although a contract tainted by
the dust of interest will not be enforced.
(The Jewish Encyclopedia, 1912).
Despite
the prohibition on taking interest, there is considerable evidence to
suggest that this rule was not widely observed in biblical times.
In addition to several references in the Old Testament to
creditors being exacting and implacable in their extraction of interest[iv],
from the Elephantine papyri it appears that among the Jews in Egypt in
the fifth century B.C.E. it was a matter of course that interest would
be charged on loans (Encyclodpedia Judaica, 1971).
This charitable nature of the prohibition on interest suggests
that its violation was not regarded as a criminal offense with penal
sanctions attatched, but rather as a moral transgression.
The
phenomenon of evasion can also be partly explained by changing economic
conditions, beginning in the amoraic period in Bayolonia when interest
prohibition was held to no longer be compatible with the eocnomic needs
of the community. In time,
a standard form of legalization of interest was established, known as hetter
iskah, meaning the permission to form a partnership, which has
become so accepted that nowadays all interest transactions are freely
carried out in accordance with Jewish law, by simply adding to the note
or contract concerned the words al-pi
hetter iskah. (Encyclodpedia Judaica, 1971).
Usury
in Christianity
Despite
its Judaic roots, the critique of usury was most ferverently taken up as
a cause by the institutions of the Christian Church where the debate
prevailed with great intensity for well over a thousand years[v].
The Old Testament decrees were resurrected and a New Testament
reference to usury added to fuel the case[vi].
Building on the authority of these texts, the Roman Catholic Church had
by the fourth century AD prohibited the taking of interest by the
clergy; a rule which they extended in the fifth century to the laity.
In the eighth century under Charlemagne, they pressed further and
declared usury to be a general criminal offence.
This anti-usury movement continued to gain momentum during the
early Middle Ages and perhaps reached its zenith in 1311 when Pope
Clement V made the ban on usury absolute and declared all secular
legislation in its favour, null and void (Birnie, 1952).
Increasingly
thereafter, and despite numerous subsequent prohibitions by Popes and
civil legislators, loopholes in the law and contradictions in the
Church's arguments were found and along with the growing tide of
commercialisation, the pro-usury counter-movement began to grow.
The rise of Protestantism and its pro-capitalism influence is
also associated with this change (McGrath, 1990), but it should be noted
that both Luther and Calvin expressed some reservations about the
practice of usury despite their belief that it could not be universally
condemned. Calvin, for
instance, enumerated seven crucial instances in which interest remained
“sinful”, but these have been generally ignored and his stance taken
as a wholesale sanctioning of interest
(Birnie, 1952). As a
result of all these influences, sometime around 1620, according to
theologian Ruston, “usury passed from being an offence against public
morality which a Christian government was expected to suppress to being
a matter of private conscience [and] a new generation of Christian
moralists redefined usury as excessive interest” (1993: 173-4).
This
position has remained pervasive through to present-day thinking in the
Church, as the indicative views of the Church of Scotland (1988) suggest
when it declares in its study report on the ethics of investment and
banking: “We accept that
the practice of charging interest for business and personal loans is
not, in itself, incompatible with Christian ethics.
What is more difficult to determine is whether the interest rate
charged is fair or excessive.” Similarly,
it is illustrative that, in contrast to the clear moral injunction
against usury still expressed by the Church in Pope Leo XIII's 1891 Rerum
Novarum as “voracious usury ... an evil condemned frequently by
the Church but nevertheless still practised in deceptive ways by
avaricious men”, Pope John Paul II's 1989 Sollicitude
Rei Socialis lacks any explicit mention of usury except the vaguest
implication by way of acknowledging the Third World Debt crisis.
Usury
in Modern Reformist Thinking
Some
may be surprised to discover that Adam Smith, despite his image as the
“Father of the Free-market Capitalism” and his general advocacy of
laissez-fair economics, came out strongly in support of controlling
usury (Jadlow, 1977; Levy, 1987). While
he opposed a complete prohibition of interest, he was in favour of the
imposition of an interest rate ceiling.
This, he felt, would ensure that low-risk borrowers who were
likely to undertake socially beneficial investments were not deprived of
funds as a result of “the greater part of the money which was to be
lent [being] lent to prodigals and projectors [investors in risky,
speculative ventures], who alone would be willing to give [an
unregulated] high interest rate” (Smith, 1937: 339).
The
great twentieth century economist John Maynard Keynes held a similar
position believing that
“the disquisitions of the schoolmen [on usury] were directed towards
elucidation of a formula which should allow the schedule of the marginal
efficiency to be high, whilst using rule and custom and the moral law to
keep down the rate of interest, so that a wise Government is concerned
to curb it by statute and custom and even by invoking the sanctions of
the Moral Law” (1936: 351-3).
Another
less well known anti-usury economic reformist was Silvio Gesell (1904),
yet Keynes wrote that the
world could learn more from him than from Marx.
Gesell, as a successful nineteenth century merchant in Germany
and Argentina, condemned interest on the basis that his sales were more
often related to the ‘price’ of money (i.e. interest) than people's
needs or the quality of his products.
His proposal of making money a public service subject to a use
fee led to widespread experimentation in Austria, France, Germany, Spain
Switzerland, and the United States under the banner of the so-called
“stamp script movement”, but these initiatives were all squashed
when their success began to threaten the national banking monopolies
(Kennedy, 1995). Margrit
Kennedy (1995), a German professor at the University of Hannover, is one
of the most vocal contemporary critics of interest who builds on
Gesell’s ideas, believing that “interest ... acts like cancer in our
social structure”. She
takes up the cause for “interest and inflation-free money” by
suggesting a modification of banking practice to incorporate a
circulation fee on money, acting somewhat like a negative interest rate
mechanism.
Finally,
another school of modern interest critics have their roots in the
complementary work of several socio-economic reformists of the early
twentieth century, namely Douglas (1924), Fisher (1935), Simons (1948)
and Soddy (1926). Their
chief common premise was that it is completely wrong and unacceptable
for commercial banks to hold a monopoly on the money or credit creation
process. For banks to then
charge interest (including to government) on money which they had in the
first place created out of nothing, having suffered no opportunity cost
or sacrifice, amounted to nothing less than immoral and fraudulent
practice. Various
alternative systems are proposed by the original authors and carried
forward by their modern-day torch-bearers, for example, the Social
Credit Secretariat and the Committee
on Monetary and Economic Reform.
RATIONALE
FOR THE CRITIQUE OF USURY
Throughout
the history of the criticism of usury, various reasons and rationale
have been forwarded in support of this position.
While some are unique to particular traditions or individuals,
many tread on common ground which this section will briefly attempt to
synthesise.
Usury
as Unearned Income
The
Church's simplest and perhaps earliest objection to usury was on the
basis that it constituted unearned income, an idea which stemmed from
its general doctrine of Just Price.
The Lateran Council of 1515 clearly expressed such a view of the
Church: “This is the
proper interpretation of usury when gain is sought to be acquired from
the use of a thing, not in itself fruitful (such as a flock or a field)
without labour, expense or risk on the part of the lender.”
Birnie reinforces this point by noting that “to live without
labour was denounced as unnatural, and so Dante put usurers in the same
circle of hell as the inhabitants of Sodom and other practisers of
unnatural vice” (1952: 4).
This
is also the rationale Ahmad uses to explain why in Islam God[vii]
“permits trade yet forbids usury”:
“The difference is that profits are the result of
initiative, enterprise and efficiency.
They result after a definite value-creating process.
Not so with interest”; also
“interest is fixed, profit fluctuates.
In the case of interest you know your return and can be sure of
it. In the case of profit
you have to work to ensure it” (1958: 25).
Perhaps Aristotle had similar sentiments in mind when he argued
that “a piece of money cannot beget another”.
There
is an important psycho-political dimension to this argument.
Keynes’ biographer, Skidelsky, intriguingly comments that
“Keynes’s sense that, at some level too deep to be captured by
mathematics, ‘love of money’ as an end, not a means, is at the root
of the world’s economic problem” (1992: 454).
Hence, at a fundamental level of analysis, the so-called evils of
usury must be understood as being connected with money being a social
psychological construct legitimised by the power dynamics of a given
political economy which may or may not be democratically and consciously
legitimatised. An
illustration of this understanding can be seen in the Christian
tradition where Jesus is asked whether taxes should be paid to Caesar.
Before uttering the famous words, “Render unto Caesar what is
Caesar’s,” he tellingly first asks to be shown a coin and inquires,
“Whose image and superscription hath it? (Luke 20:24)”.
In other words, “What power structure legitimises this
currency?” Jesus’s
response therefore said much more than merely “pay your taxes.”
It invited questioning of the very psycho-spiritual power
dynamics that constitute the deep roots of human relationship in
economy, and which have always caused matters of political economy to be
central to prophetic witness.
Usury
is what marks the distinction between money being simply a socially
contracted abstract mechanism to lubricate between supply and demand,
and money as an end in itself. As
an end in itself, as a social commodity legitimised through usury to tax
other economic activity, the honest process of living by the sweat of
one’s brow is short-circuited. The
true dignity and full reward of ordinary labour is compromised.
Money thus becomes self-perpetuating power in itself rather than
just a mediating agent of power. And
it is the relentlessness of compound interest in the face of adversity
that sets the potential cruelty of usury apart from equity-based return
on investment. Resonant with Skidelsky’s comment about Keynes, one can
see how it is the love of money as an end in itself, not the use of
money itself, that is said to be the root of all evil (1 Timothy 6).
It was in recognition of the the need to have corrective feedback
mechanisms that Islam not only injuncts usury, but also imposes Zakat or
wealth tax. And more radical still, the Old Testament proposes a
complete economic readjustment through the “Jubilee” process every
fifty years (Leviticus 25), though there is no evidence that such
wholescale redistribution of wealth in all forms was ever actually
carried out. Perhaps it is
a prophetic vision whose time has yet to come.
Usury
as Double Billing
A
slightly more obscure rationale was employed by the Church later in the
Middle Ages in order to strengthen its anti-usury doctrine.
Drawing on some of the concepts of Civil Law, it argued that
money was a consumable good (fungible),
for which the ownership passed from lender to borrower in the course of
the loan transaction (mutuum),
with the fair price of ‘sale’ therefore being the exact amount of
the money advanced. Hence
to ask for more in the form of interest was illegal and immoral, “like
selling a loaf of bread and then charging in addition for the use of
it” (Birnie, 1952: 6). Or,
as Aquinas intimated in his Summa
Theologiae, it would be to sell the same thing twice (Ruston, 1993).
Usury
as Exploitation of the Needy
The
condemnation of usury in the form of charging for loans to the poor and
destitute is a recurring theme in several traditions.
This is clearly the contextual meaning of the Judaic biblical
passages in Exodus and Leviticus (Encyclopedia Judaica, 1971) and Ruston
suggests that “the original target of the medieval usury laws was the
medieval equivalent of the
‘loan shark’ [but that] the medieval theory was unsatisfactory
because it could not distinguish the helpful
loan from the oppressive” (1993: 173).
Sir Sayyed’s school in Islam similarly interprets riba
as “the primitive form of money-lending when money was advanced for
consumptional purposes” (Ahmed, 1958: 21).
In the Indian tradition, this understanding of usury can be also
found, as is evident from this twentieth century quote:
“It is Usury - the rankest, most extortionate, most merciless
Usury - which eats the marrow out of the bones of the raiyat
[cultivators] and condemns him to a life of penury and slavery" (Jain,
1929: 110-111).
Ruston
(1993) claims usury as exploitation of
the needy still exists in modern times.
He cites as an example the findings of a 1992 Policy Studies
Institute report which concludes that the poor pay more in absolute
terms for their money, while seeking credit only for absolute
necessities rather than to finance the acquisition of luxury goods which
they cannot afford. This is
borne out by a recent study by the National
Consumer Council (1995) on financial services and low income
consumers; as one respondent put it: “It's like being caught, gotcha,
and then they [the banks/lenders] start winding you in”.
Hence, the poor have to sweat doubly so that the rich might live
on interest.
A
parallel modern argument relates to the devastating social impact of the
so-called “Third World debt crisis”, a situation which even Pope
John Paul II (1989) acknowledges in his Sollicitude
Rei Socialis when he states: “Capital
needed by the debtor nations to improve their standard of living now has
to be used for interest payments on their debts”.
This critical modern manifestation of usury is dealt with in more
depth and detail in the comprehensive works of Susan George,
A Fate Worst Than Debt
(1988) and The Debt Boomerang
(1992), among numerous others. For
now, it is only worth pointing out to critics of the Islamic
interest-free banking system that if sovereign debt during the 1970’s
had been advanced on an equity investment basis, debtor countries would
not have been caught on the rack of compounding interest at rates
established by non-domestic macroeconomic factors.
Servicing costs could not have burgeoned whilst at the same time
most commodity prices paid to debtor nations collapsed.
Return on capital and perhaps capital repayment itself, being
commensurate with a nation’s economic wellbeing, would have fluctuated
in accordance with ability to pay.
The debtor nations would therefore have enjoyed fiscal security
akin to that of a low geared company. Of course, the fact that much
sovereign debt comprised recycled dollars from oil producing Moslem
countries is an irony, and a disgrace, that should escape notice no more
than eyes should be averted to the hypocricy of usury-promoting
countries such as Britain and the United States whose leaders often
proclaim Christian values. Be
that as it may, by applying the Islamic approach, a lot of human misery
could have been avoided. Applying
the same principle, this could be the case for the countless individuals
and enterprises caught in the trap of impoverishment through
non-sovereign debt.
Usury
as a Mechanism of Inequitable Redistribution of Wealth
The
observation that usury acts as a mechanism by which 'the rich get richer
and the poor get poorer' is common to several traditions.
Islam rejects financial interest on the basis that it contradicts
the Principle of Distributive Equity which its political economy strives
to enshrine: “Interest in
any amount acts in transferring wealth from the assetless section of the
population” (Choudhury and Malik, 1992: 51).
Coming from a totally different perspective as a self declared
‘individualist’, Birnie reaches a similar conclusion:
“Interest, by making capital a quasi-monopoly, effectually
prevents the establishment of a true competitive system” (1958: 1).
Kennedy (1992) provides some excellent empirical evidence of this
phenomenon which relates to Germany in 1982.
She shows that, while the poorest 2.5 million households paid out
(net) DM 1.8 billion in interest, the richest 2.5 million households
received (net) DM 34.2 billion. She
even goes on to suggest that this covert redistributive mechanism
technically works against the constitutional rights of the individual in
most countries given that money is a government service to which the
public should have equal access.
The
psychological effect of this on the relatively poor can be seen to be
magnified when merely quantitative evaluation of transfers from poor to
rich is superceded by
consideration of the qualitative cost of such a wealth transfer.
For the relatively rich, the utility gain provided by usury is
marginal to the already substantial utility of the principal sum.
The principle of the diminishing marginal utility of wealth
therefore applies to each incremental unit of wealth procured by
interest earnings. The
poor, however, experience the converse of this.
For them, the loss in utility incurred by having to pay interest
is qualitatively much greater than the gain to the rich.
Each unit of interest paid incurs increasing marginal utility
loss. Permitting usury to
operate in an economy therefore reduces overall utility in the economy.
This must count as one of the strongest arguments against usury.
Any justification of it as an efficient economic instrument would
have to first demonstrate that it functions to increase total utility.
In the absence of such demonstration, it can justifiably be
condemned as a tool of tyranny.
Usury
as an Agent of Economic Instability
Gesell’s
(1904) main objection to interest is that it is an endemic factor in the
instability of interest-based economies, i.e. the cycles of boom and
bust, recession and recovery. Similarly,
Ahmad, arguing from an Islamic perspective, claims “the greatest
problem in the capitalist economy is that of the crises [and] interest
plays a peculiar part in bringing about the crises” (1958: 36).
Even Keynes, the campaigner for interest-based monetary policy,
admits the fact that “the rate of interest is not self-adjusting at
the level best suited to the social advantage but constantly tends to
rise too high” (1936: 350). Kennedy
(1995) is bolder, suggesting that the compounded growth of interest may
in fact cause inflation. She
shows, for instance, how in Germany, while government income, Gross
National Product and the salaries and wages of the average income earner
rose by about 400% between 1968 and 1989, the interest payments of the
government rose by 1,360% which she claims implies an inflationary
effect.
Usury
as Discounting the Future
The
last reason cited for condemning usury relates to the concept and
practice of discounting future values.
Because compound interest results in an appreciation in invested
monetary capital, it is presumed rational for people to prefer having a
specified amount of currency now than the same amount some time in the
future. This simple and
rarely questioned logic has several disastrous implications.
For instance, Pearce and Turner (1990) note that discounting
affects the rate at which we use up natural resources - the higher the
discount rate (derived partly from the interest rate), the faster the
resources are likely to be depleted.
Daly and Cobb (1990) take this observation to its logical
conclusion and show that discounting can lead to the “economically
rational” extinction of a species, simply if the prevailing interest
rate happens to be greater than the reproduction rate of the exploited
species. Another
consequence of the discounting principle, argued by Kula, is that “in
evaluating long term investment projects, particularly those in which
the benefits and costs are separated from each other with a long time
interval, the net present value rules guide the decision maker to
maximise the utility of present generations at the expense of future
ones” (1981: 899).
In
this context it is fitting to observe that a key feature that
distinguishes financial economy from nature’s economy is that the one
operates on a compound interest basis, whereas the other is based on
simple interest. Money
deposited in the bank may yield 10% plus interest on the compounded sum
next year, but in nature, if you leave this year’s crop of apples on
the tree, you are unlikely to pick a compoundedly heavier crop next
year! Accordingly, usury
permits a disjunction between financial and ecological economy. The
result is either the progressive destruction of nature, or in the
absence of redistributive social justice, an inbuilt necessity for
periodic financial crashes throughout history.
The point is well made by the illustration that if Judas Iscariot
had invested his thirty pieces of silver at just a few percentage points
compound, repayable in silver as of today, the amount of silver required
would be equivalent to the weight of the Earth.
The
implicit ethics, or dearth thereof, of discounting can be used to
illustrate clearly why usury corrupts the natural world as well as
social relations. For
instance, consider the impact of net present value discounted cash flow
methodolgy in appraising the trade-off between natural and human made
capital which, over the fullness of time, can usually be justified only
if the utility of future generations is discounted (McIntosh, 1996).
This violates intergenerational equity - a key principle of
sustainable development recognised by both the 1987 Brundtland
Commission and the 1992 Rio Earth Summit of the United Nations.
It also violates an age old percept of right livelihood which
flies in the face of the presumption of time value of money on which
interest rates are based: that is, it violates the presumption of many
traditional land users that the land should be handed on to the next
generation in at least as good heart as it was inherited from the
forebears. Discounting, as
the counterpoint of usury, can be thus exposed as rueful device employed
to justify theft of the children’s future.
Exploration of the theoretical basis and practical illustrations
of this argument perhaps provides much scope for future micro and
macroeconomic research in ecological economics.
A
MODERN APPLICATION OF USURY PROHIBITION
Islamic
Banking
A
previous section on Islamic prohibition of usury made mention of the
rejection by Islam of financial interest or riba,
largely on the grounds of its negative distributive justice and equity
effects (Khan, 1986). Out
of this prohibition has developed perhaps the most sophisticated and
complete theoretical systems of interest-free political economy in the
world (Chouhury & Malik, 1992).
The
specific methods for implementing Islamic banking have centred around
financial equity based approaches, most notably Mudarabah
- a joint venture between the bank and a ‘partner’ with both
contributing to the capital of the project and sharing the profit or
loss - and Musharakah - in
which all the capital for an investment is provided by the bank in
return for a predetermined share of the profit or loss of the business
undertaking (Kahn & Mirakhor, 1986).
The
first modern Islamic bank was established in the 1960s in Egypt (The
Banker, 1989) and in the ensuing three decades, Islamic banking has
grown into an industry with $80 billion in deposits and 100 banks and
finance houses (Khalaf, 1995). Much
of this growth has been as a result of the comprehensive attempts by
Iran, Pakistan and Sudan over past 10 years to restructure their
national banking systems to bring them into accordance with Islamic law
of the Shari’ah (Aftab,
1986; The Economist, 1992a).
In addition, increasing numbers of banks outside these countries,
including in Western countries, have begun to offer parallel Islamic
banking services (O’Brien & Palmer, 1993).
As recently as 1996, the UK joined these latter ranks, with
Flemmings Merchant Bank (1996) offering the first Islamic banking
service, the Oasis Fund, to British customers.
The
claimed advantages of the Islamic banking approach to finance are that
it results in: more just and equitable distribution of resources; more
responsible and profitable lending due to the necessarily closer
bank-client relationship; less volatile business cycles; and more stable
banking systems (Taylor & Evans, 1987); as well as “the relative
efficiency of the interest-free money system over the alternative
interest-based system” (Darrat, 1988).
On the other hand, the Islamic banking industry has been
criticised on a number of counts too: for its lack of uniformity and
standardisation of products, accounting systems and endorsements by
different sharia boards (Khalaf
op.cit); various bad-debt
complications (Shreeve, 1988); the information-gathering burden on
potential consumers and banks themselves to ensure the security and
profitability of their funds, as well the lack of an interest-rate
mechanism to use as a macro-economic tool (The
Economist, 1992b). However,
these limitations must be viewed against the backdrop of Islamic banking
as a young and innovative growth market.
CONCLUSION
The
preceding paper has attempted to briefly describe the extensive history
of the critique of usury, and to crystallise and synthesise the main
tenants of the arguments used in support of this position.
The fact that we live in a global economic system which is more
usurious/interest-based than ever before begs the question, therefore:
Are any of these criticisms of the past either serious and convincing
enough or currently relevant enough to merit a legitimate challenge to
the status quo? In the
authors’ opinon, every one of the reasons cited in the critique of
usury, perhaps with the exception of “double billing”,
seems more pressing and relevant now than ever.
In particular, it is the belief of the authors’ that
individuals or organisations in the West with money to invest,
especially those which like to consider themselves as being ethical,
might have rather more to learn from Islam than is generally
acknowledged. But first,
society needs to be re-conscientised to the relevance of the age-old
usury debate in modern times.
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Wayne
A.M. Visser is the Manager of the Environmental Consulting Unit in
KPMG’s South African Office and a Fellow of Edinburgh’s Centre for
Human Ecology.
Alastair
McIntosh is a Fellow of Edinburgh’s Centre for Human Ecology
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