Economy occupies most of our daily talk. In
rich and poor countries alike, few communities are immune from escalating
economic problems. The majority of people in the world live on the
breadline while many countries depend on foreign 'aid' for survival.
Receiving foreign 'aid' adds more to their problems, since, unable to pay
even the interest, these countries face great hardship.
From health to education, all issues are
kept moving by means of finance. However, whether developed countries or
not, economic conditions hit people hard. Wealth, extravagance and their
natural consequence, degradation, sit next to impoverishment. Unable to
meet their essential needs, people fight with each other. Many reports and
studies, programmes for improvement, and seminars to raise awareness of
the issue flounder for want of viable solutions and the fact remains that,
each day adds to the despair and misery of much of the world.
Unemployment is a major global problem.
Even if people are employed, their wages are not sufficient to secure good
living conditions. Even so, hundreds of candidates apply for a few
vacancies in public service, which will bring a rather moderate income.
People wait in queues for hours in front of unemployment offices in the
dim hope of finding a job.
What is the solution, then? Why do measures
fail to eradicate these problems?
In any country, economic development,
productivity, flourishing job opportunities, and a productive workforce
are essential to maintain economic stability. Yet, statistics indicate
that there are almost 820 million unemployed around the world. When we add
the number of dependants to this figure, the dimensions of the problem
become even more serious.
In our day, economic systems, especially in
underdeveloped countries, rely on bank interest. The high interest rates
offered to depositors by banks have a destructive impact on national
economies. This becomes the main reason why people put their money in
banks rather than investing or using it productively. The wealthy find it
easier to live on the interest they receive rather than working and in a
society where most people do not work it is unlikely to boost investment,
which is essential for the improvement of the country.
In such systems, newspapers carry bank
advertisements giving the following message: "You can stop investing in
your business and go on a holiday…" This rationale, albeit seemingly
simple and attractive, brings devastation to a country rather than welfare
and wealth. An economy that is not nurtured by investments is doomed to
ruin. Money accumulated in bank accounts and safes is the main source of
such economic problems as inflation. Those who do not contribute to the
economy and who put their money in the bank and "go on a holiday" will
themselves suffer the consequences in the long term. Their money resting
in the bank will constantly lose value since, in the course of time, it
will not keep up with the rising rate of inflation.
In an economy resting on production, an
overall recovery occurs which benefits everyone. Indeed, Allah commands us
to spend our money for the benefit of people. In Surat at-Tawba, Allah
gives the news of a painful punishment for those who amass their
possessions:
You who have iman! Many of the rabbis and
monks devour people's property under false pretences and bar people from
access to the Way of Allah. As for those who hoard up gold and silver
and do not spend it in the Way of Allah, give them the news of a painful
punishment…
(Surat at-Tawba: 34)
In a society where the Qur'anic principles
are applied, practices which are essentially to the benefit of people keep
the system moving. Thus, Allah prohibits usury and thus prevents people
suffering under the burden of debts:
Those who practise usury will not rise
from the grave except as someone driven mad by Satan's touch. That is
because they say, 'Trade is the same as usury.' But Allah has permitted
trade and He has forbidden usury. Whoever is given a warning by his Lord
and then desists, can keep what he received in the past and his affair
is Allah's concern. But all who return to it will be the Companions of
the Fire, remaining in it timelessly, for ever.
(Surat al-Baqara: 275)
In another verse, Allah stressed that usury
does not bring prosperity to man:
Allah obliterates usury but makes charity
grow in value! Allah does not love any persistently ungrateful
wrongdoer.
(Surat al-Baqara: 276)
To improve living standards, stability and
order are essential in all domains of social life. This also holds true
for the economy. Believers are those who should assume the responsibility
of providing solutions. In this respect, nobody has the time to lose
waiting for others to take the initiative. That is because Allah gave this
responsibility to every believer. To fulfil it, one primarily needs to
communicate the religion and the blessings that the religion adds to one's
life.
The members of a community having a sincere
faith that possessions, unlike usury, spent for the good of people will
bring prosperity, will spend the part of their possessions they do not
need for a good cause without hesitation. The benefits of such a system
are evident to society. However, people should not see such a system as
unattainable. The way to prevent this is to teach people the Qur'an.
It is also important to stress that, in the
type of social life that is guided by the Qur'an and the Sunnah people
strive not only for their own welfare, but for the welfare of the public
since the values of Islam demand co-operation, solidarity and unity.
Being prohibited by Allah from doing so,
people do not violate one another's rights. No one tries to unlawfully
take others' possessions or rights. No one commits fraud in measuring and
weighing. In a society living by the Qur'an, injustice is never allowed.
Consequently, usury-ridden relations end. The wealthy do not rip off the
poor and people do not attempt unlawfully to take other's portions.
In a society where religious values apply,
nothing is wasted. People consume but avoid extravagance. Co-operation and
justice maintain better living standards and welfare. The Blessed Period
of the first community of Islam, an age of welfare when people in general
adhered to the Qur'an and the Sunnah, is an explicit example of this fact.