Bridge over ocean
2 December 2019 Research Reports

Sustainable, Responsible, and Impact Investing and Islamic Finance: Similarities and Differences

  1. Usman Hayat, CFA

Although Islamic finance and sustainable, responsible, and impact (SRI) investing appear unrelated, they share key similarities. Emerging trends may enable financial services providers to develop products that satisfy criteria of both approaches.

Islamic finance and sustainable, responsible, and impact (SRI) investing may appear to be completely unrelated approaches. Islamic finance prohibits riba (lending at risk) and excessive gharar (sale of risk). SRI investing has environmental, social, and governance (ESG) considerations at its core, but it still depends on conventional financial concepts of investing. Surprisingly, however, Islamic finance and SRI investing have profound similarities.

Although both approaches evolved in different cultural circumstances and separate historical periods, they share a focus on ethical considerations of stewardship and social responsibility. Moreover, some of the fundamental differences also provide ethical links between these two distinct modes of finance. For example, some prohibitions of Islamic finance are consistent with the negative screening approach commonly used by SRI investors. This publication examines the similarities and differences between Islamic finance and SRI investing and analyzes emerging points of convergence that favor the inclusion of ESG principles in Islamic finance. These trends could allow providers of financial services to create products that satisfy the criteria of both sets of investors.
Sustainable, Responsible, and Impact Investing and Islamic Finance: Similarities and Differences Read the full report (PDF)

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