Aya

1953
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The Economic System of Islam

1421 AH / 2000 CE

:: Content ::

1 Introduction to Economic System

2 Economy

3 Types of Ownership - Private Ownership

4 The First Means of Ownership: Work (‘Amal)

5 The Work of the Employee (Worker)

6 The Second Means of Ownership

7 The Third Means of Ownership

8 The Fourth Means of Ownership

9 The Fifth Means of Ownership

10 The Way to Dispose of Property

11 Trading and Manufacturing

12 The Laws of Partnership (Companies)

13 Capitalist Companies

14 The Prohibited Methods of Increasing Ownership

15 Right of Disposal to Spend in Gifts and Maintenance

16 Public Property (Al-Milkiyyah Al-Ammah)

17 State Property

18 Nationalised Property is neither

19 Secluding (Hima)

20 Factories

21 Bait ul Mal (The State Treasury)

22 Distributing Wealth among the People

23 Riba and Currency Exchange (Sarf)

24 Money/Currencies (An-Nuqood)

25 Foreign Trade

This book of the economic system in Islam is a precious intellectual Islamic fortune, rarely matched. It is the first book which crystallises, clearly and obviously, in this century, the reality of the economic system of Islam in this period in an explicit fashion.

It explains the Islamic view of the economy and its objective, how to own property and increase it, how to spend and dispose of it, how to distribute the wealth amongst the citizens in society and how to establish a balance within it.

It explains the types of properties (private, public and State property) including the property due to the Bait ul-Mal and the areas over which it is spent.

It explains the rules of lands, whether ‘Ushriyya or Kharajiyya, and what is obliged in them of the tithe (‘Ushr) or land tax (Kharaj) and how to utilise, cultivate and allocate and also how to transfer them from one owner to another.

It also discusses the different types of currencies (Nuqud) and what occurs in them of Riba, exchange and what is obliged from them of Zakat.

Finally it discusses the foreign trade and its rules. The sole sources in adopting the rules mentioned in this book are the Book of Allah and the Sunnah of His Messenger and what they directed to, namely analogy and Ijma’a as-Sahabah. No other source is taken in adopting these economic rules.

The book introduces the reality of the capitalist and socialist, including (communist) economic systems and their refutation, explaining their defects and contradiction with the economic system of Islam.