For these answer to be of any use we need
some common terminology. So let us start with some definitions. Banks,
no good. Banks involve not only usury but as an institution is not
acceptable in many respects one of which is the creation of credit.
Financial services, that is services derived from credit activity, are
no good either. Money and credit must remain separated.
In Islam we have wadiah, the contract of
safekeeping, it is not a financial service, since the wakil keeping your
property has no right to use it or lend it to others. You give him your
property he returns it to you for a fee. Payments through a wakil are
known and permitted provided that the legal restrictions are taking into
account. To ask someone holding your property in ‘amanah to pay in ‘ayn
on your behalf to some other person is known and acceptable.
The legal
restrictions are more cumbersome when it comes to pay some other person
using dayn (a debt or an IOU). The legal restrictions refer to the
limits of transferring debts (see al-Muwatta). Essentially the limits
consist of eliminating the possibility of the sukuk (the receipt) to
circulate as the specie itself, that is the possibility of the sukuk
turning into paper money as we know it today (which is Riba, see
al-Muwatta). The transfer of debts (dayn) requires the cancellation of
the previous debt by the original issuer: the issuer must be present
during the transfer (it is invalid in his absence) and it must be proven
his capability to pay (the issuer must have the verifiable funds).
Baitul Mal is the treasury of the Amir.
The Amir collects and disperses funds as he wishes. You cannot open an
account in the Baitul Mal. It only holds one account, that is the
Amir’s. You can open an account in the form of a wadiah, safekeeping.
You can open an open an account with a wakil, who will perform any duty
you ask him to. So, here we have two basic institutions we can refer to:
Wadiah and Wakala, that can be translated as, Safekeeping and Agency. I
am not aware of any other way in which you could have an account with
someone else. How about ‘amanah?
‘Amanah is trusting in general and is
more generic than Wadiah or Wakala. Wadiah is an ‘amanah with the
specific purpose of safekeeping. Wakala is an ‘amanah with the purpose
of safekeeping plus making payments or selling on behalf of the owner.
The “Dinar economy” is in its infancy.
The infancy must be interpreted as the fact that the full implementation
of the Dinar requires the existence other institutions (of Muamalat)
that they are still missing. The complete implementation of the Dinar
(its maturity) will depend on the full implementation of Muamalat. This
is similar to building a house, you start from the foundations, then you
do the ground floor, then the first floor and then you put the windows
and the roof. You need a plan of construction.
You also need to know what you want to
build. Even though on the beginning the foundations don’t look like a
house, the architect must have in mind the idea of the full house. Since
I started this movement to return to the Gold Dinar and I have been
doing most of the thinking, I can call myself the architect, some people
call me the “Father of the Gold Dinar”. My model is the ‘amal of the
ahl al-Madinah. My sources are the Muwatta of Imam Malik and
particularly important, the Mudawanah of Sahnun. This is nothing to do
with madhhab, this is to do with ‘Amal, that is, practice. 99% of what
you called Dinar economy is my doing. If something is wrong is my fault.
If something is right is because I managed to interpret well the ‘amal
of Madinah. And Allah knows best.
What is the long vision of the Gold Dinar?
The full implementation of Muamalat according to the original sources.
Fiat currencies are not our way. They are part of banking, they originate from banking and we endure them as a result of the elimination of freedom represented by the crowning of capitalism in our constitutions through three main elements: Central Banks, National Debt and Legal Tender. Constitutions are part of the New World Order envisioned by XVIII humanists. Historically constitutionalism is anti-Khalifate and therefore anti-Islam. Needless to say, Islamic constitutions are like Islamic banks, a complete absurdity.
Fiat currencies are not our way. They are part of banking, they originate from banking and we endure them as a result of the elimination of freedom represented by the crowning of capitalism in our constitutions through three main elements: Central Banks, National Debt and Legal Tender. Constitutions are part of the New World Order envisioned by XVIII humanists. Historically constitutionalism is anti-Khalifate and therefore anti-Islam. Needless to say, Islamic constitutions are like Islamic banks, a complete absurdity.
That the majority of ulema today take
this status quo for granted does not disarm the purity of our
objectives, it only shows that we are living in dark days. When I
started this movement of the Dinar there was nobody who knew or cared
about the Dinar, now there are millions. When the light comes the
darkness disappears. For defending the return of the Dinar I was called
naïve, utopian and all kind of other things. Many of those people have
now joined me, others are now silent. I say: Fiat currencies are haram,
Central banks are haram, Islamic banking is haram, National Debt is
haram, Legal Tender is haram, and Constitutions that enshrine those
elements are haram. And Allah knows best.
Many still disagree with me on those
grounds (above) and therefore what follows is irrelevant for them. My
concern is not what is haram but what is halal. In search of the halal
we return again and again to the practice of Madina. It is impossible to
understand the ‘amal of Madina if what is in your mind is the present
‘amal of capitalism. To understand you have to divorce yourself from the
present way of doing things and you have to walk the streets of Madina,
only then you might understand.
The second element to understand is “what
comes before what”, that is, the order of priorities and for that you
need to think like an architect. You need to sense what is the
primordial core and what is secondary. That is what led me to write
about the Core Mechanism of Islamic Trading: Dinar and Dirham, Markets
and Qirad. It is all in black and white.
When you intend to replace a system such as capitalism with something entirely new such as Muamalat you need to understand priorities but also the boundaries.
Even though you are starting with
something small you cannot compromise the meaning what is halal and what
is haram. Therefore if you do something and you want to differentiate
it by calling it Islamic it must be Islamic, rather than “almost
Islamic” or “our intention is Islamic”. This is not acceptable. If we
feel that we still need banks in the initial stages, then we use them,
but we should call them “Haram Banks”. Then we are clear. Islam is not
negotiable.
Now we can progress. The Idea of Replacing: “National Government replaced by Amirate”. Well, be careful that we don’t fall into nationalist fallacies. The Amirate must be of Dar al-Islam. “Central bank replaced by Mint”: these two institutions have nothing to do with each other. They are totally different. Instead of replacing, we should think in terms of building or growing from zero. This is more like planting a seed and seeing it grow until it becomes a tree, rather than replacing the fruits of the tree.
I decided to start with the Dinar. This
is the seed. The first thing is to get gold and mint the coins. There
you have the first Mint. I called it Islamic Mint. We had several Mints.
Then I decided to create World Islamic Mint as a guarantor of the
standards. The standards of Madinah: the mithqal and 7/10 of the
mithqal. Then it came the question of the alloys. The Dinar of Madinah
was not 999.9 because they did not have the metallurgic capabilities of
today. The intention though was to create a pure gold coin, but they
couldn’t as we can today. So the ‘amal was a coin mixed with silver
(they could not separate silver from gold in those days), but the
intention was a pure coin. Should we make a 24k coin or a 22k -as we
decided? A 24k coin is too soft and wares out rapidly in circulation.
Wearing out is critical because if it falls bellow certain weight is no
longer a Dinar. The average life of a 22k gold in circulation is about
15 years, the average life of a 24k gold coin in circulation is about 3
years. The conclusion is obvious. If you mixed pure gold with 10% silver
the coin doubles in strength, if you mix it with 10% copper its
strength is 20 times bigger. WIM decided to make the standard 22k with a
mix of silver and copper (50/50). That is ijtihad.
There is no place for ijtihad regarding
the weight, the weight is the mithqal. But what is the mithqal? WIM says
4.25 gr. Since we could not measure 72 grains of barley accurately, we
took our weight from non circulating original Dinars that are still
preserved in museums. We took the best coins and average their weights.
The result: 4.25 gr.
Coins require to be identifiable and as
much as possible they should not be counterfeited easily. The first line
of defense against counterfeiting is quality. We need to mint at the
best quality possible so the number of possible counterfeiters is
diminished. Second you introduce security features. They are of two
kinds: visible to the naked eye and non-visible. Cost is important, so
you need to introduce them according to necessities with the hope of
being ahead of counterfeiters. This concern is fundamental for the Mint.
It is a responsibility.
The good news is that there are security
features that are impossible to counterfeit. WIM has an implementation
plan to introduce them gradually without incurring an excessive cost on
the final user. Some of the security features are expensive to implement
in relatively small quantities.
Bear all those elements into account and
you can have a hundred different dinars with different “flavours”. What
you cannot expect is people, especially shops, with a list of one
hundred different standards and one hundred different prices. Imagine
how to deal with mutual exchange of coins. So, the answer to your first
question.
1.
Is the long term vision of the Gold Dinar that there will exist
mutliple regional flavours of Dinars (just like regional currencies),
and well-known liquid exchange rates, determined by market forces, will
exist between them?
WIM has a single global standard and all
the coins have the same design and security features. WIM just recently,
made the first change in standards, the Kelantan Dinar has all those
features, including new security features. All of the WIM coins will
follow this standard by Jan 2011. The old WIM coins will be re-minted
into the new standards or will be taken out of circulation. The network
of WIM shops with the sticker “We accept Dinar and Dirham” will only
accept the new standard coins. E-Dinar will only accept and use the new
WIM standards from Jan 2011.
WIM will therefore have a single global
standard. All the other coins are seen as gold material. Imam Malik in
the Muwatta speaks of coins that are “popular” and coins that are “not
popular.” Acceptance is the ultimate text. Nobody can be forced to
accept coins that they do not want and do not trust.
Coins will have the value that people decide to give them. And nobody can change that, and nobody should not change that.
2. Or is it that somehow, all issuing authorities will collaborate with each other to issue coins at fixed prices?
That is precisely the job of WIM, we coordinate between all the mints that subscribe to our principles.
WIM establishes what we call a
Recommended Retail Price, which means that all the coins have the same
‘recommended’ price worldwide. The advantage is that we can
interexchange the coins one to one without exchange fee. This radically
increases the acceptability and functionality of our regulated coins.
3. Or is it that there will be only one global issuing authority?
Because of the security features you need
to limit the number of minting houses. WIM accredits Mints if they
fulfil minimum conditions of quality and can technically introduce the
security features. We are in negotiation with a number of them.
4.
Or is it that magically, inspite of different market prices in terms of
external currencies, people will voluntarily start exchanging them at
same price by respecting their gold content alone and ignoring their
brand?
People are the ultimate market makers.
Mints and WIM can only make claims in regard to the quality of the coins
they produce, nothing more and nothing less.
Pricing is to do with what you have in
front of you. Imam Malik differentiates three types of gold and silver
objects: nuggets (material), coin, and jewelry. Material and jewelry are
exchanged without measure. That is to say, the value of a piece of
jewelry does not depend on its weight. Same applies to material. Only
coins (of the same standard) do.
What makes the coin coin is their ability
to function as a means of payment. Thus there is a difference between
coin and bullion. There is also a difference in price. We are at a
moment in history when we are just starting to use gold and silver coins
as means of payment, therefore it is logical to conclude that the value
of the coins will depend on their increasing ability to serve as means
of payment.
The job of WIM is to increase those
functionalities. The job of the people is to price them according to
whether that ability is reasonably performed or not. WIM might strive
with its standards to improve functionality, but the ultimate price is
only established by the users.
Value of Electronic Payments
Value of Electronic Payments
Payment systems in general have to also
follow Islamic Law. The basic legal structure of payment systems is the
Wakala. This is the model. Electronic payment system refers not to
electronic currency, but electronic means of communicating with the
Wakil. The means of payment are the physical coins.
The expression back by gold could be
misleading, if it is not understood that the payment is made with
physical coins that must be present. If we call e-dinar to the unit of
payment it must be understood that the payment is made with physical
dinars. The e-dinar unit cannot circulate independent of the physical
coin.
If you think about the E-dinar project as a building then these are the steps. First the question of the repository:
1) A central repository with a central Data Base
2) Multiple repositories with a central Data Base
3) Infinite repositories with a central Data Base
2) Multiple repositories with a central Data Base
3) Infinite repositories with a central Data Base
Essentially the idea is to disperse the
stock and avoid as much as possible central repositories. Each step
requires a process. On the beginning you build the payment system on a
singular repository. It is the easiest. The decentralisation of the
repositories has an impact on transfer fees, since it becomes
unnecessary to transport gold if you live near a repository.
The Second issue is the type of accounts:
1) Bullion
2) Bullion and coins
3) Only coins and only bullion
1) Bullion
2) Bullion and coins
3) Only coins and only bullion
The idea is that you progressively
eliminate the bullion and transform it into coins as the demand for
coins increases. When we started E-dinar, hardly anybody demanded the
coins in redemption of their accounts. 99% percent of customers demanded
redemption in bullion. This gradually changed as the physical coins
gained acceptability on the ground. Consequently E-Dinar has been
changing the stock to meet demand.
Since the introduction of the new WIM
standard and the stickers, WIM demanded E-dinar to move to the next
stage and from Jan 2011 E-Dinar will have “only coins” accounts and
“only bullion” accounts. The new accounts will be in display by November
this year and will be in full functionality during December, according
to what I heard from E-dinar chairman, Dr Habib Dahinden.
With the new accounts available in Jan
2011, all e-dinar units are exchangeable with dinar coins only, one to
one. Fees are applicable depending on location of the repository (thus
decentralisation), but only in case of redemption and thus the logic of
multiple repositories.
It follows that the price of the e-dinar
is identical to the dinar. And it follows that the use of e-dinar
through a smart card or mobile telephony bears the same value as a
physical dinar except the coin is safekept in the nearest repository.
There is a fee for the acceptance of the e-dinar unit which is beared by
the shop under the terms and conditions of the agreement, but this fee
is ridiculously small: 1% or maximum 0.015 e-dinar (for e-dinar
transactions), max. 0.5 e-dirham (for e-dirham transactions), whatever
the lowest.
Reserve Responsibility
The best reserve system is to hold the
dinar in your pocket. Given the fact that some users demand to hold
accounts with a wakil in order to facilitate their payments then we need
a payment system. Repositories are best the nearer they are to the
user. And therefore a payment system should try to come as close as
possible to the user.
When you deposit your money with a wakil
you must trust him. If you do not, do not do it. The trustworthiness of
the wakil is based on his reputation as granted by the community and his
performance. Rasulullah, salallahu alaihi wa salam, was well known
amongst his people as the AMIN (the trustworthy one).
At the moment e-dinar is an internet
based electronic payment and exchange system that facilitates
transactions which are 100% backed by physical gold and silver. From Jan
2011 you will see something like this: e-dinar is an internet based
electronic payment and exchange system that facilitates transactions
which are 100% backed by physical dinar and dirham. And you will also
see a differentiation between bullion accounts and coin accounts. The
issue has been explained earlier.
WIM has responsibility to inspect E-dinar
systems and to award them with being a WIM payment system. If you
notice WIM has not yet given its WIM logo to E-Dinar, it will only
happen after Jan 2011.
Allah is our Lord. He is the Master of
everything in the Heavens and the Earth. He is our Protector and our
Guardian. His people are known to Him and they are measured by their
actions. Rasulullah, sallalahu alaihi wa salam is our model, we follow
his steps and that of his Companions. There is a clear sign for the
people who follow him, that is Victory, for Victory is the sign of the
selected who abide to the Commands and fulfil them. And Victory belongs
to Allah.
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