Points out that the small and cottage industry (SCI) sector is often neglected despite its potential for contributing to economic development, especially in the third world; and reports an investigation of the use of the Bai‐Muajjal (BM) method of financing in the Bangladesh SCI sector. Explains the theoretical basis and methodology of the study, the possible sources of funds for SCI owners, the particular characteristics of Islamic banks and the fund investment methods they offer. Describes the BM lending activities of one such bank with 40 “grass root level” SCIs (poultry farming and handloom industry), which require borrowers to create groups, undergo monitoring and open savings accounts; and assesses their effects on SCI owners’ saving habits and the mobilization of savings towards productive ends. Identifies many social and economic advantages in the BM system and welcomes it as a way to channel savings productively and reduce poverty.
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1 March 2003
Literature Review|
March 01 2003
Institutionalization and promotion of saving habits through Bai‐Muajjal mode of financing
Mohammed N. Alam
Mohammed N. Alam
Fresh Start Coordinator, (A Self‐Employment Development Project for Women in the Peel Region), Apt No. 241, 7170 Darcel Ave., Mississauga, Ontario, L4T 3T5
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Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Online ISSN: 1758-7743
Print ISSN: 0307-4358
© MCB UP Limited
2003
Managerial Finance (2003) 29 (2-3): 3–22.
Citation
Alam MN (2003), "Institutionalization and promotion of saving habits through Bai‐Muajjal mode of financing". Managerial Finance, Vol. 29 No. 2-3 pp. 3–22, doi: https://doi.org/10.1108/03074350310768661
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