Islamic Trade & Business
The Islamic system of business, trade and finance management (banking)
is said to be the best as it will not allow any exploitation of the lower
and middle classes and that the distribution of the wealth will be equitable.
However, our history tells us differently. There was rarely, if ever, any
middle class and it were only the rich or the poor in our early days as well as
during the later Khilafat period (in fact Malukiat) – of the Ummayads,
the Abbasids and the Fatimides. What surprises me most is how could some
of them – including Sahaba e Ikraam amass so much of wealth in the early days
of Islam through trade only.
Please allow me to elucidate it with an example:
Gold today is around Rs.60,000/ a tola and wheat more than a 1000/= a maund.
In 1955 gold was Rs. 60/= per tola and wheat Rs. 7 a
maund. In 1941 gold was Rs. 32/= a tola and wheat 12 annas a maund (2
maunds for Rs. 1/50) and so on so forth. 500 years back at the time
of Alla ud Din Khilji commodities were roughly One Paisa a maund. By the same
tolen 1500 years back these should have been priced still lesser, but for
argument sake let’s keep them at One paisa a maund. Now the inter-city/country
land trade was done through camel caravans. A healthy camel can carry 7 to 8
maunds of load. A real large caravan of, say, Abu Sufiyan used to comprise of
about 1000 camels, and that too not all his own. Other people also used
to send their export goods on their camels with such caravans – essentially for
protection and safety sake. They could as such carry 7000 to 8000 maunds in
all. The most precious commodity could no t have been by any stretch of
imagination more than a rupee a maund. As such assuming a caravan carried ONLY
the most precious commodities its worth would have been Rs. 7000 to 8000
only one way. No more than two such trading round trips could be made in a
year. That means the total business during a year was around Rs. 28,000 to
32000 only. Now what was their profit margin that on such seemingly low
investments they could amass thousands of rupees (Dirham or Dinars)? Some of
them were so rich that Abu Sufiyan financed 10 battles against the Prophet
(SAW). Hazrat Usman was known as Ghani for his wealth and apart from many
other financial contributions had donated a well worth 70,000 dirhams to the
Muslims. Similarly, many others were reputed to be men of great
means. Where from did they get all that money and how? What fiscal or
banking system they followed that offered such lucrative and promising business
deals? Was it Islamic? And if it was, would it allow us also to make such huge
profits? Mind you, Sirs, at present with much faster communications,
business correspondence through computers and faxes, instant on line
money transactions and the much faster and efficient modern modes of
transportation of shipments through air and sea one cannot make more than 10
to15 per cent profit and yet our clerics call it unIslamic ?
Regards
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