Browse by Author "Nafis Alam"
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- PublicationA comparative analysis of risk-taking behaviour of Islamic and conventional banksNafis Alam; Syed Aun Raza Rizvi; Mansor H. Ibrahim (2016)
The slides highlight 1) the importance of risk-taking; 2) variables - risk-taking, bank-specific, macroeconomic, and regulation of the study.
- PublicationDoes competition make banks riskier in dual banking system?Nafis Alam; Dyi Ting Tan; Baharom Abdul Hamid (Elsevier B.V., 2019)
This paper investigates competition and risk-taking behaviour of Islamic banks taking a sample of 59 Islamic banks and 149 conventional banks from 10 highly developed Islamic banking countries between 2006 and 2016. The level of competitiveness between the two types of banks is determined using Lerner index and estimations show that Islamic banks have lower market power than conventional banks. After controlling all the bank and country-specific variables, the results show that competition and risk are positively related for the overall banking system and inversely related for Islamic banks which undoubtedly emphasize that inherent difference between risk-competition relationships among these two distinct bank types. Overall, in the case of Islamic banks, the results provide evidence in favour of "competition stability view" where higher competitive market associated with fierce competition from conventional banks and its peers' reduces Islamic banks' risk-taking behaviour.
- PublicationIslamic economics and Islamic finance in the world economyNafis Alam; Mansor H. Ibrahim (Wiley, 2018)
This paper places the articles in this special issue in the contexts of Islamic economics and finance research. It highlights the foundations of Islamic economics, which are in practice manifested in Islamic finance. Then, the paper brings up three key issues in Islamic finance today: the Islamicity of Islamic banking, real contributions of Islamic finance, and Islamic finance in the present monetary framework. While there are some promising theoretical and empirical findings pointing to positive contributions of Islamic finance, there is still a need for Islamic finance to distinguish itself from the conventional finance and to further demonstrate its real effect.
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