Log In  |  Register Now  
 Home | Syndication Services | Media Features | Research Center | Archive | Contributors | About Us

To receive our weekly e-newsletter containing headlines and highlights from The Globalist, sign up here.



Topic

Companies

Culture

Development

Diplomacy

Economy

Environment

Finance

Health

History

Markets

Media

Music

Politics

Religion

Security

Sports

Technology

Women

Youth


Region

Africa

Asia-Pacific

Europe

Latin America

Middle East

North America


Globalist Bookshelf

Best Books of 2009

Best Books of 2008


Editorial Staff

Contributors

Jobs & Internships


Subscribers to The Globalist's premium services can log in here:

Username:

Password:

Forgot your password?




 


Globalist Perspective > Global Economy
Why Osama bin Laden Hates Microfinance
 

By David Apgar | Friday, September 21, 2007
 

Osama bin Laden's recent videotape was astonishing in that it provided deep insights not into his whereabouts or next targets, but rather his view of development economics. Given his acknowledged hatred of interest rates, the al-Qaeda leader evidently has no patience for the world of Muhammad Yunus and microfinance. David Apgar explains.


as Osama bin Laden become the first prophet in a new line of Islamic Marxists? Or is he just another would-be dictator searching for specious arguments?

Consider the tape Osama bin Laden made for the sixth anniversary of the 2001 terrorist attacks.

He argues we should understand not only Afghanistan, Iraq, global warming, and poverty and hunger in Africa — but also the fact that so many Americans are "reeling...under the burden of interest-related debts, insane taxes, and real-estate mortgages" — as "one side of the grim face of the global system.”

Scary similarities

Osama bin Laden's hostility not just to democracy but also to globalization reveals a more sinister fear — the fear of processes that promote independent economic development.

Economic justice and global warming may be new themes for the al Qaeda leader, but he may just be joining an old, deeply disturbing tradition — the tradition of autocrats who assert and try to maintain authority by arresting economic development.

It's not so surprising to find Osama sneering at capitalists' supposed efforts "to turn the entire world into a fiefdom of the major corporations under the label of globalization in order to protect democracy."

After all, he's for theocracy, or rule by the word of God, and that's antithetical to democracy, or rule by the people.

Mixing religion and finance

His hostility not just to democracy but also to globalization, however, reveals a more sinister fear shared by many who want to impose personal authority — and that's the fear of processes that promote independent economic development.

In Osama's case, it may be the fear that economic development will keep young men away from the mosques.

Extreme solutions

The notion that Osama’s jihadist solution covers the sub-prime
The ban on interest rates — disputed by Islamic scholars, by the way — is just the extreme form of interest rate caps enacted around the world.
mortgage crisis, admittedly, takes the breath away. There's a certain grim logic to the idea that Islam's ban on interest rates would put a real brake on sub-prime mortgage teaser rates.

In fact, teaser rates would never be allowed to rise above zero. And the no-covenant bonds that fund those mortgages wouldn't be so risky if borrowers faced some of the more severe sanctions for lying in Islamic law.

But wait a minute. Osama’s revolution used to be about the outrage of infidel troops on holy land in Saudi Arabia — not the pains of over-extending for beach houses, wasn't it.

Helping the poor

In fact, that ban on interest rates — disputed by Islamic scholars, by the way — is just the extreme form of interest rate caps enacted around the world. True enough, these measures are often enacted in the name of the poor — but in the trenches of economic reality, they have the precise opposite effect of reserving credit access for the rich.

Look at some of the countries with the most restrictive interest rate caps: Algeria, Myanmar, Pakistan and Syria. Instead of protecting the poor from unscrupulous lenders, the caps in these countries have tended to strangle microfinance.

An off-shoot of banking made famous by Nobel laureate Muhammad Yunus’ Grameen Foundation, microfinance serves poor borrowers in remote areas who rarely have access to loans from mainstream financial institutions.

Preventing usury

Surely, Osama would argue,
Osama's revolution used to be about the outrage of infidel troops on holy land in Saudi Arabia — not the pains of over-extending for beach houses, wasn't it.
a cap of, say, 30% protects the poor from usury. But suppose it costs 25% of the value of a $100 loan to a woman with a loom and some talented assistants in Pakistan’s remote Baluchistan just to get to her, check out the enterprise — and collect payments?

Even the safest investments earn 10% in Pakistan. As a result, such a loan at 30% interest would lose money if it were ever extended in the first place and the interest rate cap ends up depriving her of credit. But it won't block big loans to software businesses in downtown Karachi.

Failing somewhere

Apart from interest rate regulations that have strangled microfinance in its crib, what else do Algeria, Myanmar, Pakistan and Syria have in common today?

Despite their adherence to much of bin Laden’s economic advice, they aren’t exactly known as paragons of economic justice and opportunity. What they share are autocratic, military governments.

Fearing the man

And why should Osama’s economic vision dovetail with the way unpopular military
Banning interest rates in the name of the poor has the precise effect of restricting their credit access.
regimes manage modern economies? Might it be because both wrest control of their people’s fate from them — by convincing them of external threats?

It is possible that the fear on the part of Osama and his al-Qaeda organization is not of materialism per se — despite the curious insistence of President Bush that its struggle stems from a resentment of America's materialist way of life.

The rich revolutionary may harbor a deeper fear — of the prospect of the independent material advance of the poor.

Religion versus independent material advance

Of course, no one, to my knowledge, begrudges the poor all forms of material advance. Independent material advance, however, is another story.

Just as independent material advance by a populous class threatens a military regime’s control of economic resources, so it threatens a religious regime’s claim to be the key to fulfillment.

Majoring in martyrdom

The fact that the madrassahs, or Islamic schools, that al-Qaeda supports prepare young men for nothing but martyrdom — teaching them no languages but Arabic, no history, no law, no management skills or economics, and certainly no sciences, engineering, or mathematics — may not be an accident.

Young men who can fend for themselves and support families will not die for the glory of a leader who would have denied them independence.


Let us know what you think ...
 

 

 

 

You must be a registered user of our site to send us your comments. If you have already registered, please log in. If you a new user of our site, please register now. Registration is quick, easy and completely free.

   

Complete the below to send a letter to the editor about this article.

   
Name  
 
Email Address  
 
City and State  
 
Country  
 
Comments  
 

 
Please note: If we publish your comment on The Globalist, we will identify only your name, city and country. We do not publish anonymous comments. Your email address will not be published.

We regret that we cannot publish every comment we receive. Furthermore, because we review each comment before it is published, there may be a delay between the time you send your comment and its appearance on our site. The Globalist reserves the right to edit comments for style and length.

Copyright © 2000-2010 by The Globalist. Reproduction of content on this site without The Globalist's written permission is strictly prohibited. Terms of Use | Privacy Policy

The Globalist claims full trademark rights to The Globalist name and logos.

McPherson Square, 927 15th Street, NW, Washington, D.C. 20005
The Globalist