21 Feb 2008 01:19:12 | Sam Vaknin
I. OVERVIEW
In the wake of the September 11 terrorist attacks on the USA,
attention was drawn to the age-old, secretive, and
globe-spanning banking system developed in Asia and known as
"Hawala" (to change, in Arabic). It is based on a short term,
discountable, negotiable, promissory note (or bill of exchange)
called "Hundi". While not limited to Moslems, it has come to be
identified with "Islamic Banking".
Islamic Law (Sharia'a) regulates commerce and finance in the
Fiqh Al Mua'malat, (transactions amongst people). Modern Islamic
banks are overseen by the Shari'a Supervisory Board of Islamic
Banks and Institutions ("The Shari'a Committee").
The Shi'a "Islamic Laws according to the Fatawa of Ayatullah al
Uzama Syed Ali al-Husaini Seestani" has this to say about Hawala
banking:
"2298. If a debtor directs his creditor to collect his debt from
the third person, and the creditor accepts the arrangement, the
third person will, on completion of all the conditions to be
explained later, become the debtor. Thereafter, the creditor
cannot demand his debt from the first debtor."
The prophet Muhammad (a cross border trader of goods and
commodities by profession) encouraged the free movement of goods
and the development of markets. Numerous Moslem scholars railed
against hoarding and harmful speculation (market cornering and
manipulation known as "Gharar"). Moslems were the first to use
promissory notes and assignment, or transfer of debts via bills
of exchange ("Hawala"). Among modern banking instruments, only
floating and, therefore, uncertain, interest payments ("Riba"
and "Jahala"), futures contracts, and forfeiting are frowned
upon. But agile Moslem traders easily and often circumvent these
religious restrictions by creating "synthetic Murabaha
(contracts)" identical to Western forward and futures contracts.
Actually, the only allowed transfer or trading of debts (as
distinct from the underlying commodities or goods) is under the
Hawala.
"Hawala" consists of transferring money (usually across borders
and in order to avoid taxes or the need to bribe officials)
without physical or electronic transfer of funds. Money changers
("Hawaladar") receive cash in one country, no questions asked.
Correspondent hawaladars in another country dispense an
identical amount (minus minimal fees and commissions) to a
recipient or, less often, to a bank account. E-mail, or letter
("Hundi") carrying couriers are used to convey the necessary
information (the amount of money, the date it has to be paid on)
between Hawaladars. The sender provides the recipient with code
words (or numbers, for instance the serial numbers of currency
notes), a digital encrypted message, or agreed signals (like
handshakes), to be used to retrieve the money. Big Hawaladars
use a chain of middlemen in cities around the globe.
But most Hawaladars are small businesses. Their Hawala activity
is a sideline or moonlighting operation. "Chits" (verbal
agreements) substitute for certain written records. In bigger
operations there are human "memorizers" who serve as arbiters in
case of dispute. The Hawala system requires unbounded trust.
Hawaladars are often members of the same family, village, clan,
or ethnic group. It is a system older than the West. The ancient
Chinese had their own "Hawala" - "fei qian" (or "flying money").
Arab traders used it to avoid being robbed on the Silk Road.
Cheating is punished by effective ex-communication and "loss of
honour" - the equivalent of an economic death sentence. Physical
violence is rarer but not unheard of. Violence sometimes also
erupts between money recipients and robbers who are after the
huge quantities of physical cash sloshing about the system. But
these, too, are rare events, as rare as bank robberies. One
result of this effective social regulation is that commodity
traders in Asia shift hundreds of millions of US dollars per
trade based solely on trust and the verbal commitment of their
counterparts.
Hawala arrangements are used to avoid customs duties,
consumption taxes, and other trade-related levies. Suppliers
provide importers with lower prices on their invoices, and get
paid the difference via Hawala. Legitimate transactions and tax
evasion constitute the bulk of Hawala operations. Modern Hawala
networks emerged in the 1960's and 1970's to circumvent official
bans on gold imports in Southeast Asia and to facilitate the
transfer of hard earned wages of expatriates to their families
("home remittances") and their conversion at rates more
favourable (often double) than the government's. Hawala provides
a cheap (it costs c. 1% of the amount transferred), efficient,
and frictionless alternative to morbid and corrupt domestic
financial institutions. It is Western Union without the hi-tech
gear and the exorbitant transfer fees.
Unfortunately, these networks have been hijacked and compromised
by drug traffickers (mainly in Afganistan and Pakistan), corrupt
officials, secret services, money launderers, organized crime,
and terrorists. Pakistani Hawala networks alone move up to 5
billion US dollars annually according to estimates by Pakistan's
Minister of Finance, Shaukut Aziz. In 1999, Institutional
Investor Magazine identified 1100 money brokers in Pakistan and
transactions that ran as high as 10 million US dollars apiece.
As opposed to stereotypes, most Hawala networks are not
controlled by Arabs, but by Indian and Pakistani expatriates and
immigrants in the Gulf. The Hawala network in India has been
brutally and ruthlessly demolished by Indira Ghandi (during the
emergency regime imposed in 1975), but Indian nationals still
play a big part in international Hawala networks. Similar
networks in Sri Lanka, the Philippines, and Bangladesh have also
been eradicated.
The OECD's Financial Action Task Force (FATF) says that:
"Hawala remains a significant method for large numbers of
businesses of all sizes and individuals to repatriate funds and
purchase gold.... It is favoured because it usually costs less
than moving funds through the banking system, it operates 24
hours per day and every day of the year, it is virtually
completely reliable, and there is minimal paperwork required."
(Organisation for Economic Co-Operation and Development (OECD),
"Report on Money Laundering Typologies 1999-2000," Financial
Action Task Force, FATF-XI, February 3, 2000, at
http://www.oecd.org/fatf/pdf/TY2000_en.pdf )
Hawala networks closely feed into Islamic banks throughout the
world and to commodity trading in South Asia. There are more
than 200 Islamic banks in the USA alone and many thousands in
Europe, North and South Africa, Saudi Arabia, the Gulf states
(especially in the free zone of Dubai and in Bahrain), Pakistan,
Malaysia, Indonesia, and other South East Asian countries. By
the end of 1998, the overt (read: tip of the iceberg)
liabilities of these financial institutions amounted to 148
billion US dollars. They dabbled in equipment leasing, real
estate leasing and development, corporate equity, and
trade/structured trade and commodities financing (usually in
consortia called "Mudaraba").
While previously confined to the Arab peninsula and to south and
east Asia, this mode of traditional banking became truly
international in the 1970's, following the unprecedented flow of
wealth to many Moslem nations due to the oil shocks and the
emergence of the Asian tigers. Islamic banks joined forces with
corporations, multinationals, and banks in the West to finance
oil exploration and drilling, mining, and agribusiness. Many
leading law firms in the West (such as Norton Rose, Freshfields,
Clyde and Co. and Clifford Chance) have "Islamic Finance" teams
which are familiar with Islam-compatible commercial contracts.
(continued)
About Author :
Sam Vaknin is the author of Malignant Self Love - Narcissism
Revisited and After the Rain - How the West Lost the East. He is
a columnist for Central Europe Review, United Press
International (UPI) and eBookWeb and the editor of mental health
and Central East Europe categories in The Open Directory and
Suite101.