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Application of Islamic banking instrument (Bai Salam) for agriculture financing in Pakistan

journal contribution
posted on 2018-07-26, 00:00 authored by Ahmad KaleemAhmad Kaleem, RA Wajid
Purpose: Islam prohibits interest as a source of income or profit. The purpose of this paper is to explore the possible application of Bai Salam contract (forward sale agreement) as an alternative financial instrument in the agriculture sector of Pakistan. Design/methodology/approach: A survey was conducted in four districts of the Punjab with a specifically designed questionnaire. A convenient sampling technique was used to gather farmers' concerns related to crops inputs, output and credit requirements. Findings: Empirical findings conclude that agriculture income represents only up to 60 percent of the income of an average farm household. About 70 percent of farmers participate in the credit market. They need money to purchase crops inputs, to pay the labour and to hire rental machinery. Farmers believe that they can save up to 25 percent in costs if they purchase inputs on cash. The survey also discloses that middlemen are the larger financers and buyers of crops in the rural economy whereby only 10 percent of transactions are conducted on a purely cash basis. Farmers usually return the money after the sale of the crop. Research limitations/implications: The concept of the paper can be extended to areas where large landlords dominate the scene. Alternatively, it can be extended towards non-farm activities such as cattle raising and poultry. Originality/value: The paper is a first comprehensive effort to explore the possible application of an Islamic banking instrument in the agriculture sector of Pakistan. It also suggests three possible models for financing under a Bai Salam contract. Some policy recommendations are also given. © Emerald Group Publishing Limited.

History

Volume

111

Issue

3

Start Page

275

End Page

292

Number of Pages

18

ISSN

0007-070X

Peer Reviewed

  • Yes

Open Access

  • No

Era Eligible

  • Yes

Journal

British Food Journal

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