Islamic finance and business education has flourished over  the last decade or so in line with the growth of the industry.  Universities, business schools, colleges and professional bodies - both  in the Muslim countries and in other countries especially Europe,  Singapore and the US - have introduced courses on Islamic finance  purportedly helping to meet the demand for trained human capital, the  dearth of which is a major bottleneck threatening the continued growth  of the industry.  (source)
Not surprisingly, in the absence of a  globally recognized accreditation body for Islamic finance and business  education, quality and standards are at best mixed, with some courses  bordering on the ordinary and mediocre. At the same time, students who  do graduate, complain that it is very difficult to find employment  placements in the Islamic finance industry, sometimes even as  internships. 
In the UK, maintains Professor Simon Archer of the  ICMA Center and the Henley Business School, Reading University, which  offers Masters and PhD courses in Islamic Finance, "a number of  universities responded to this demand for human capital development in  the Islamic finance industry with varying levels of quality. Some of  these responses it seems to me personally to be rather opportunistic.  They saw this bandwagon and the chance of fees to be earned from new  students, and decided to jump on. There are some very honorable  exceptions to this, especially Durham University."
Indeed the IE  Business School in Madrid earlier this month organized a seminar on  Islamic finance and business education and the role of universities in  its development and expansion, with Reading University, IE Business  School, Durham University, Strasbourg University, King Abdul Aziz  University in Jeddah and Casa Arabe in Madrid all participating. 
The  consensus was that there is a dearth of excellent text books on Islamic  finance; research literature is somewhat sparse and where it exists it  is spread out in a number of journals on Islamic finance which are not  tremendously accessible. 
Perhaps to some people's surprise, IE  Business School, which is in the Top 10 of the FT Business School  rankings, is spearheading education in Islamic finance and business and  has the aspiration of becoming the Islamic finance education hub in  Europe. Its campuses in the financial district of Madrid and elsewhere  in the city are second to none, and it already offers Islamic finance as  a subject or component of nits MBA and Masters in Finance degrees. 
Next  October, the IE Business School, according to Professor Ignacio de la  Torre, academic director for Masters Program at the school, will  introduce a first Degree in Finance "of which Islamic finance will be a  key component." The school earlier this month also launched a credit and  trading room to train students in the rubrics and dynamics of trading  floor activity, including Islamic finance. 
Professor de la Torre  is also aware that education should also serve the wider interests of  the economy and society. "In the business school environment, we have to  make people aware of asset growth and bubbles and the dangers of too  much leverage," he stresses. But he defers the responsibility of  teaching financial literacy in schools, in the workplace and to  housewives to the government. However, some 30 percent of IE Business  School Masters in Finance students opt to study courses such as  microfinance, including Islamic microfinance.
One of the big gaps  in the market is job creation in the Islamic finance market. "There are  not many jobs in Islamic finance going in Europe. Employers in general  prefer students who have some experience - not necessarily in IF but in  banking per se. It is a catch 22 situation. In the Middle East, jobs are  more on the basis of personal contacts than market dynamics. It is  important that industrial placement programs and internships are  developed. At the same time executive education is also an important  field - shorter courses for middle and senior managers. In Europe,  France has the largest Muslim population and is a tremendous potential  market. But, demand for such courses will depend on the perception that  courses are of a required quality. This in turn will depend on the  particular university," maintains Professor Archer. 
In fact,  there have been some important developments in industrial placements in  recent weeks. The Kuala Lumpur-based International Centre for Education  in Islamic Finance (INCEIF), the Global University for Islamic Finance,  the Islamic finance education arm of Bank Negara Malaysia, last month  signed a landmark agreement with the Islamic Corporation for the  Development of the Private Sector (ICD), the private sector funding arm  of the Islamic Development Bank, whereby the latter will finance a  capacity building programme, the Islamic Finance Talent Development  Program (IFTDP), for selected participants to be delivered by INCEIF. 
The  agreement was signed by Daud Vicary Abdullah, the new president and CEO  of INCEIF and Khaled Al-Aboodi, CEO of ICD, in the presence of Zeti  Akhtar Aziz, the chancellor of INCEIF. According to the two parties, the  IFTDP aims to address the global shortage of Islamic finance  professionals. INCEIF will educate postgraduates students selected by  ICD from its 46 member countries through its Chartered Islamic Finance  Professional (CIFP) program. In return ICD will offer corporate  attachments to the participants within the ICD and IDB Group as well as  ICD's investee companies globally. The 2-year work-and-study programme  will commence in first quarter 2012. 
According to Daud Vicary,  the ICD is a perfect fit to INCEIF as both share a vision to develop  talent for the Islamic finance industry. Al-Aboodi is confident that  this strategic collaboration will be the catalyst in laying the  foundation in addressing the talent shortage of Islamic finance  professionals and serve as "building in the knowledge in-roads" to the  growing interest in Islamic finance in Central Asia, Sub-Saharan Africa,  Middle East and North Africa and other parts of the world. 
There  is a need for closer alignment between the industry and the providers  of human capital development. "The Islamic finance industry," maintains  Vicary, "continues to grow and develop apace and a standard-setting  body, such as ACIFP (Association of Chartered Islamic Finance  Professional) which represents the industry, needs to move further into  this space and create appropriate industry standards for human capital  development. The delivery against these industry standards would need to  be independently accredited. We are still in the early days of  development as an industry, but would envisage ACIFP taking on a global  role such as CIMA and ACCA have in the accounting profession, for  example."
INCEIF has and will continue to keep its channel of  communication open with the industry players through, among others,  focus group discussions and engaging the industry in enhancing our  syllabus to keep it current with industry needs.
Vicary also  believes that build on and to enhance quality of education is important  because although Malaysia is one of the global front runners in Islamic  Finance, "we are aware that others are playing catch-up. Therefore, we  are always striving to improve, benchmarking ourselves against  international standards not just on Islamic finance, but other  encompassing aspects that make an organization world class be it  services and product offerings."
There also has been important  progress on the accreditation front. Earlier this year the Government of  Prime Minister Mohd Najib Abdul Razak and Bank Negara Malaysia  allocated RM3.17 million for the establishment of the Association for  Islamic Finance Advancement (AIFA), which aims to be the main  accreditation body for Islamic finance programs worldwide and will  develop initiatives to ensure the quality, industry relevance and global  recognition of Islamic finance education and its related areas.
AIFA  will collaborate with international accreditation bodies such as the  US-based Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business to  develop the standards and curriculum for Malaysia's higher education  institutions. AIFA is also cooperating with US publisher, John Wiley, to  publish five standard textbooks related to Islamic finance and banking.
With  these developments, Malaysia is fast emerging as a global cluster for  Islamic finance and banking education spearheaded by the International  Islamic University of Malaysia (IIUM) and INCEIF, which was last year  accorded university status, and the numerous other training, educational  and research institutes. 
Indeed, IIUM is spearheading the AIFA  initiative. "This year, we have already received 2,000 students locally  and globally to undergo Islamic banking and finance courses in higher  education institutions in the country and we are confident of getting  6,000 students next year. At the core of the cluster is a new  comprehensive curriculum for Islamic banking and finance education while  the existing programs will be expanded," explained Professor Mohd Azmi  Omar, Dean of IIUM.
The target is to have 55,000 local students and 28,000 foreign students in Islamic finance and business education by 2020. 
The  AIFA initiative should also be seen in the context of Prime Minister  Mohd Najib Abdul Razak's Economic Transformation Program for Malaysia  (ETF), which aims to develop Malaysia into one of the world's leading  Islamic finance education hubs. This sector is expected to contribute  RM1.2 billion to gross national income and to create 4,300 related jobs  by 2020.
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