ansamed.ansa.it - (ANSAmed) - MILAN, MAY 16 - Islamic finance is growing at an
annual rate of 20%. It has a global value of 1,600 trillion USD
and counts 400 institutes with their offices. But the system is
not breaking through in Italy, but according to Hatem Abou Said
of Al Baraka Banking Group (Bahrain) ''it could be useful also
to support SMEs, which have limited access to credit through the
traditional systems, with their internationalisation process."
Abou Said spoke during a conference in Milan on the issue,
saying that the crisis in the West and the Arab Spring ''there
is complementarity''. (source)
It would be useful, in his view, to
''attract the attention of Islamic finance to help Italian
companies that could be active in the re-launch of the countries
on the southern shore of the Mediterranean Sea."
''Islamic finance,'' Abou Said continued, ''is determined to
help the European economies that are in difficulties. But I'm
afraid that people in Italy have wrong ideas about these
instruments, which are meant for everybody, not only for
Muslims."
In this context, Pierfrancesco Gaggi, head international
relations of Italian Banking Association ABI admits, ''little
has changed since a few years ago'' and the debate that was
opened to change regulations to allow the introduction of
'sukuk' and other Islamic instruments in Italy as well has been
halted by the crisis. ''The banking sector had to deal with more
urgent issues,'' Gaggi confirmed. (ANSAmed).
Source: http://ansamed.ansa.it/ansamed/en/news/nations/italy/2012/05/16/Crisis-Islamic-finance-growing-not-Italy_6879577.html - May 16, 2012
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