Cash waqfs as a fund collection instrument for Turkey

View/ Open
Access
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessDate
2019Kind
bookPartMetadata
Show full item recordCitation
Bulut, M. & Korkut, C. (2019). Cash waqfs as a fund collection instrument for Turkey. Financing for development: alternative perspectives on challenges and opportunities of financing development (pp. 84-89). SESRICAbstract
One of the biggest problems of the modern era for developing countries is that they are not
able to develop/grow with their own insufficient savings. The developing countries generally
use the savings of developed countries for development and pay interest to developed
countries for the loan. Therefore, the development gap between the developing countries,
which need savings for development, and the developed countries, which have very large
interest income, is not closed. In order to overcome this development gap, especially the labor
force (overpopulation) and low labor cost methods are being tried. These methods only
straighten the general economy in terms of growth not development and the developing
countries cannot make a serious breakthrough in total welfare of people. The majority of
Islamic countries are in the category of developing countries. In other words, the Islamic
countries also need capital for new investments. For this reason, it is important to establish
funds that will be managed according to the procedures accepted in Islamic fiqh, which will
provide capital accumulation and resources for Islamic countries. In this study, the proposal of
the Cash Waqf Fund (CWF), which can be used for Islamic countries as a financial instrument
for development, will be examined. Unlike real estate waqfs, the entire or some part of capital consists of cash money at CWs. The
CWs became quite widespread during the Ottoman period. The main priority of these
institutions was charity. On the other hand, the funding needs of entrepreneurs in the market
were provided by CWs. Another feature of CWs is that they are the pioneers of Islamic financial
institutions with their operation methods for cash. The CWs, which lent money to the
entrepreneurs through Islamic financial methods, spent the income of this money for the
purposes of the waqf. In this way, while the continuity of the charity activities, the market’s
need for cash was provided. Thanks to the CWs, the financial institutions of capitalism, like the banks, could not enter the Ottoman geography for many years. In this study, a fund proposal
for Turkey in the implementation of the CWs, will be presented.