伊斯兰银行天课信息披露分析

Moutaz Abojeib, Mohammad Ghaith Mahaini, Mhd Osama Alchaar
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的研究全球范围内伊斯兰银行的天课披露情况。对于伊斯兰银行的存款人和股东来说,了解银行是否为他们支付天课是很重要的。此外,披露所使用的计算方法也是必要的,以消除可能误导利益相关者的模糊报告所产生的不确定性。考虑到存款人和股东可能在不同的伊斯兰银行拥有不同的账户,这个问题变得更加明显,这使得计算天课的多种方法或支付天课的一方的不同方法非常令人困惑。本研究分析了13个国家目前的做法,并推荐了最佳做法。论文的目标是通过分析2014年和2019年13个国家34家伊斯兰银行的年度报告来实现的。通过构建天课公开指数,进一步量化天课公开。该指数考虑了四个主要组成部分的披露,包括支付金额和责任、计算方法、伊斯兰教法委员会的参与以及投资账户持有人的天课税。为了进一步的稳健性,本研究得到了使用年度报告中天课字数的内容分析措施的进一步支持。研究结果表明,天课公开存在一个重大问题。总体平均披露指数较低。大多数银行在其年度报告中披露了关于天课的有限信息,例如支付的金额和责任。在接受调查的银行中,只有不到40%的银行披露了伊斯兰教法委员会在天课计算中所扮演的角色,而披露了天课计算方法足够细节的银行数量非常有限(9%)。此外,没有一家被调查的银行提到投资账户的天课。总体而言,大多数银行的天课披露,无论是遵循伊斯兰金融机构会计和审计组织还是其他方式,都没有达到预期的最佳做法。研究的局限性/意义本研究的局限性之一是仅依赖于伊斯兰银行的年度报告,而没有考虑银行可能使用的其他手段向利益相关者传达天课相关事项。此类手段的例子包括网站、社交媒体和其他直接或间接营销材料。此外,本研究的结果不应过度概括各国之间的差异,因为样本不包括在所选国家的所有伊斯兰银行。未来的研究可能会在特定国家的数据样本上使用拟议的天课披露指数。这些发现具有重大意义,因为它们引起了人们对伊斯兰银行披露其责任的核心领域即天课是否充分的严重关切。该指数可以作为天课信息披露透明度的初步衡量标准,有待进一步审查。研究结果进一步表明,应考虑伊斯兰教法委员会成员的构成,至少包括一名具有良好会计背景的成员。天课是一种宗教义务;因此,如果认为天课的数额、计算方法和支付方式缺乏透明度,可能会影响到未来向伊斯兰银行注入资金。原创性/价值本文的一个重要贡献在于收集的数据没有在任何可用的数据库中提供。更确切地说,它是人工从被审查的伊斯兰银行的个别年度报告中获取的。此外,本文还提出了一个指标来衡量银行和国家层面的天课信息披露。
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An analysis of zakat disclosure in Islamic banks

Purpose

This paper aims to investigate the zakat disclosure of Islamic banks at the global level. It is important for depositors and shareholders of Islamic banks to know whether the bank is paying zakat on their behalf or not. Additionally, disclosing the calculation method used is also necessary to eliminate uncertainties resulting from ambiguous reporting that can mislead the stakeholders. This issue becomes more obvious when considering that depositors and shareholders may have different accounts with different Islamic banks, which makes it quite confusing to have multiple ways of zakat calculation or different approaches on who is the party that pays it. This study analyzes the current practices across 13 countries and recommends best practices.

Design/methodology/approach

The objective of the paper objective is achieved through analyzing the annual reports of 34 Islamic banks in 13 countries for the years 2014 and 2019. It further quantifies the zakat disclosure by constructing a zakat disclosure index. This index considers the disclosure of four major constituents covering the amount and the responsibility for payment, the calculation method, the involvement of the Shariah board and the zakat duty on investment account holders. For further robustness, this study is further supported by content analysis measures using the zakat word count in annual reports.

Findings

The results indicate a major issue in zakat disclosure. The overall average of disclosure index is low. Most of the banks disclose limited information about zakat, such as the amount and the responsibility for payment, in their annual reports. Less than 40% of the examined banks disclose information about the role of the Shariah board in zakat calculation, and a very limited number of banks (9%) are found to disclose enough details about the zakat calculation method. Furthermore, none of the examined banks mentions the zakat due for the investment accounts. Overall, zakat disclosure of most of the banks, whether following Accounting and Auditing Organization for Islamic Financial Institutions or otherwise, are found to be not up to the expected best practices.

Research limitations/implications

Among the limitations of this study is the sole dependence on annual reports of Islamic banks without considering other means that banks might be using to communicate zakat-related matters to stakeholders. Examples of such means include a website, social media and other direct or indirect marketing materials. Additionally, the results of this study shall not be overgeneralized regarding differences between countries because the sample does not include all Islamic banks in the selected country. Future research may use the proposed zakat disclosure index on a country-specific data sample.

Practical implications

The findings have significant implications as they raise a serious concern regarding the sufficiency of the Islamic banks’ disclosure about a core area of their responsibility, that is, the zakat. The index developed can be a tentative measure of zakat disclosure transparency pending further review. The result further suggests looking at the composition of members of Shariah boards to include at least one member with a sound accounting background. Zakat is a religious duty; therefore, a perceived lack of transparency on the amount, method of calculation and how the zakat is paid may affect the future injection of capital into Islamic banks.

Originality/value

An important contribution of this paper lies in the fact that the collected data is not provided in any available database. Rather, it is manually captured from the individual annual reports of reviewed Islamic banks. Further, this paper proposes an index to measure the zakat disclosure at bank and country levels.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.80
自引率
22.70%
发文量
78
期刊介绍: The journal provides a dynamic forum for the advancement of accounting and business knowledge based on Shari’ah and Islamic activities that have an impact on the welfare of society. JIABR publishes articles on the interplay between Islamic business ethics, accounting, auditing and governance, in promoting accountability, socio-economic justice (adl) and everlasting success (al-falah). It seeks to inform, among others, current theoretical and empirical research and practice in Islamic accounting, auditing and corporate governance, management of Islamic organizations, accounting regulation and policy for Islamic institutions, Shari’ah auditing and corporate governance, financial and non-financial performance measurement and disclosure in Islamic institutions and organizations. All styles of research, theoretical and empirical, case studies, practice-based papers and research notes that are well written and falling within the journal''s scope, are generally welcomed by the journal. Scope/Coverage Development of accounting, auditing and corporate governance concepts based on Shari’ah Socio-political influence on accounting and auditing regulation and policy making for Islamic financial institutions and organizations Historical perspectives on Islamic accounting, auditing and financial management Critical analysis on issues and challenges on accounting disclosure and measurement, Shari’ah audit and corporate governance Controls and risks in Islamic organizations Financial and non-financial performance measurement and disclosure.
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