Islamic Economics
Midterm 2 Preparation
Midterm 2 Prep

Islamic Economics
Complete Study Guide

Lectures 6–10 · Comprehensive notes, tips, memory tricks & practice questions

Islam and the Economic Dilemma

What is the Economic Dilemma?

The impossibility of providing every human with all their needs and desires in the appropriate time, place, and form — this is called Relative Scarcity.

📌 Key Distinction
Relative Scarcity ≠ absolute shortage. Resources worldwide ARE sufficient for a good life — the issue is distribution, access, and human behaviour, not an actual lack of resources.

Why is Relative Scarcity Important?

① Motive to Work

Scarcity pushes people to be productive and develop the earth.

هُوَ الَّذِي جَعَلَ لَكُمُ الْأَرْضَ ذَلُولًا فَامْشُوا فِي مَنَاكِبِهَا
"It is He who made the earth tame for you — so walk among its slopes and eat of His provision."
② A Test from Allah

Hardship is a divine exam requiring patience.

وَلَنَبْلُوَنَّكُم بِشَيْءٍ مِّنَ الْخَوْفِ وَالْجُوعِ
"We will surely test you with something of fear and hunger and a loss of wealth…"

Three Aspects of the Economic Problem

1. Economic Resources (Production Factors)
  • Work: Human effort (physical or mental) to produce a good or service. Requires time, training, and preparation.
  • Capital: Part of wealth used in production — machines, tools, buildings.
  • Natural Resources: Land and surrounding resources (minerals, water, forests). Infinite in Allah's knowledge; science continually discovers new ones.
2. Human Needs

Needs vary by environment, civilization, and media. In Islam, needs must be:

  • Within halal (allowed) boundaries
  • Within basic life requirements (food, clothing, etc.)
  • Moderated — exaggeration leads to prodigality (إسراف) which is immature in Islamic thought
  • Also include spiritual needs, equally important as material ones
3. Production Methods

Methods differ in potential and output. The chosen method must be:

  • Not harmful to society
  • Allowed in Islam (halal)

Malthus Theory & Its Refutation

Malthus claimed: Population growth exceeds earth's resources → causing famine, disease, war (positive checks) or moral restraint, delayed marriage (preventative checks).

Islam refutes this — 3 reasons:

  1. Some resources are fixed (land), but others renew (forests, fish)
  2. Alternatives emerge when natural resources deplete
  3. Studies show Malthus's predictions were never realised globally
وَإِن مِّن شَيْءٍ إِلَّا عِندَنَا خَزَائِنُهُ
"And there is not a thing but that with Us are its depositories, and We do not send it down except according to a known measure."

Real Causes of Starvation (Not Scarcity)

🧠 Memory Trick — Causes of Starvation
Use the acronym DEFSS:
Distribution inequality · Exaggerated consumption · Failure to use resources · Spiritual crisis · Setting (divine test)
💡 Exam Tip
A common exam question: "What are the 3 aspects of the economic problem?" → Work, Capital, Natural Resources. Also know that relative scarcity has 2 roles: (1) motive to work, (2) divine test. Don't mix up relative scarcity with Malthus's absolute scarcity claim.

Factors of Production & Their Returns

Islamic Definition of Production

Exerting persistent effort in investing wealth resources and increasing yield for the prosperity of society, its existence and supreme values.

3 Motives for Production in Islam

① Linked to Worship

Production becomes an act of ibadah (worship) when paired with sincere intention. Prophet (ﷺ): "The value of an action depends on the intention behind it."

② Role as Caliph

Humans are successors (khalifa) on earth — responsible for developing it for present and future generations. Not only for personal gain.

③ Universe Subservient to Humanity

Allah made everything in heaven and earth subject to humans — so we must utilise and develop it responsibly.

🧠 Memory Trick — Production Motives
W.C.UWorship link · Caliph role · Universe subservient

Production Element 1: Work (Labour)

Every intentional and organised physical or mental effort to find or increase a legitimate benefit.

5 Work Ethics in Islam:

  1. Mastery (إتقان): "Allah loves that when one of you does a job, he does it with excellence."
  2. Choosing suitable work: Pick work matching your ability and capacity.
  3. Know requirements: Understanding what the job needs (like Prophet Yusuf managing storehouses).
  4. Willingness & Sincerity: Proactive, honest, and dedicated approach.
  5. Honesty: The trustworthy treasurer is among the charitable givers.
💡 Exam Tip
Know the community/government's 3 roles: (1) Provide job opportunities & training, (2) Supervise economic activity & employer-worker relations, (3) Government can compel necessary professions and ban harmful activities.

Production Element 2: Capital

The portion of wealth used to produce goods and services (machines, tools, buildings, cash).

2 Islamic Capital Formation Policies:

5 Forms of Cash Capital Partnership

#FormWho Contributes
1Equal PartnershipBoth put capital + work; profits by share
2Brokerage (Mudarabah)One = money, one = effort; profit by agreement
3Unequal CapitalBoth put money (unequal), one invests; profits shared
4One Capital, Both WorkOne = money, both work; profit by agreement
5Solo TradeOne person owns and trades independently

Production Element 3: Land (Natural Resources)

Land, minerals, soil, crops, rivers, and all surrounding natural resources.

2 Methods of Utilizing Owned Land:

📌 Both Musaqah & Muzara'ah require
(1) Worker receives a known, agreed-upon fraction (half, third, etc.) · (2) That share comes from the entire total produce, not a fixed amount.
🧠 Memory Trick — Musaqah vs Muzara'ah
Musaqah = "S" for Sapling/crops already there (irrigating existing crops)
Muzara'ah = "Z" for Zero, starting from scratch (cultivating bare land)

Consumption and Consumer Conduct

Definition

Consumption = the use of goods and services by a household / the final purchase of goods and services by individuals. It is used as a proxy (indicator) of the overall economy.

3 Elements of Consumption Theory

① Rationalization

Following Islamic guidelines in managing money.

② Economic Liberty

Rational freedom — not absolute freedom — guided by Islamic principles.

③ Interest & Gratification

Satisfaction of needs — but in Islam this includes spiritual dimension.

Rationalization — 4 Rules

1. Prohibition of Luxury (تَرَف / Taraf)

Indulging in extravagant luxury is condemned — it was the cause of punishment for past nations. Do not use gold/silver utensils.

2. Prohibiting Israf (إسراف) and Tabthear (تبذير)
  • Israf: Exceeding the limit of temperance in spending (less extreme than Taraf)
  • Tabthear: Spending on wrongful/unworthy things — "spendthrifts are brothers of the devils" (Quran)
3. Moderation in Expenditure
وَلَا تَجْعَلْ يَدَكَ مَغْلُولَةً إِلَىٰ عُنُقِكَ وَلَا تَبْسُطْهَا كُلَّ الْبَسْطِ
"Do not let your hand be tied to your neck (miser), nor stretch it out fully (spendthrift)."

The Prophet ﷺ: "Eat, give charity, and clothe yourselves — without extravagance and without showing off."

4. Prohibition of Harmful Commodities/Services

Includes alcohol, gambling, etc. — "an abomination of Satan's handiwork." Strictly avoid for success.

Islamic vs. Non-Islamic Consumption (Comparison)

AspectNon-Islamic EconomyIslamic Economy
Concept of Interest Material enjoyment only Material AND spiritual; includes reward/punishment dimension
Consumer Authority Absolute — consume anything Must be legitimate (halal)
Utility & Luxury More consumption = more happiness Rationality is imperative; extravagance is not allowed
🧠 Memory Trick — Consumption Rules
T.I.T.H: Taraf (luxury) · Israf (excess) · Tabthear (wasteful) · Haram goods — all PROHIBITED in Islam.
The golden rule: "Middle path — neither miserly nor extravagant."
💡 Exam Tip
Know the difference between Taraf, Israf, and Tabthear — examiners love this. Taraf = luxury lifestyle (most extreme), Israf = exceeding limits in spending, Tabthear = spending on wrong things.

The Market in Islamic Economic Thought

Definition of Market

An arrangement where sellers and buyers meet and exchange, and pricing is determined.

📌 Remember
There is a specific Du'a (supplication) to recite when entering the market — this is an Islamic ethic of commerce.

9 Ethics & Rules of the Market in Islam

1. Fair Weights & Measures

Cheating in weights is a major sin. Allah destroyed the people of Shu'ayb (peace be upon him) for it. Includes: reducing weight, cheating in quality, lying about specifications.

وَيْلٌ لِّلْمُطَفِّفِينَ
"Woe to those who give less than due."
2. Prohibiting Usury (Riba / الربا)
وَأَحَلَّ اللَّهُ الْبَيْعَ وَحَرَّمَ الرِّبَا
"Allah permits trade and forbids usury."

Same type (gold for gold, riyal for riyal): must be equal + immediate exchange.
Different types (gold for silver, riyal for dollar): different amounts allowed, but must be immediate.

3. Honesty — Avoiding Cheating

Prophet ﷺ: "The one who cheats is not one of us."

4–9. Other Prohibited Practices
  • False Bidding (Najash): Raising price by a fake bidder who doesn't want to buy — both seller and fake bidder sin.
  • Cheating incoming merchants: Don't intercept traders entering town to devalue their goods.
  • Selling unowned goods: "Do not sell what is not with you."
  • Exploiting buyer's inexperience/need.
  • Monopoly: Withholding grain/goods to raise prices is forbidden. Prophet ﷺ: withholding grain 40 days seeking high price = renouncing God.
  • Facilitate all transactions: "May Allah's mercy be on him who is lenient in buying, selling, and demanding back money."
🧠 Memory Trick — Market Prohibitions
FUSMEN:
False bidding · Usury · Selling unowned goods · Monopoly · Exploiting buyers · Najash (cheating incoming traders)
💡 Exam Tip
For the Riba rules: remember the keyword "same type = equality AND immediate exchange." "Different types = different amounts OK, but MUST be immediate." This is a classic exam distinction.

Pricing in Islam

The Basic Principle

Islam ensures lawful, exploitation-free earnings. It does not interfere with prices in normal conditions — the Prophet ﷺ refused to set prices when people asked during a price rise, saying:

"Indeed, God is the One who sets prices, the One who withholds and bestows, the Provider. And I hope to meet God with none of you having a claim against me for injustice in blood or property."

2 Reasons for High Prices

Reason 1: Law of Supply & Demand (Natural / By Allah's Decree)
  • Demand: Inverse relationship — price ↑ → demand ↓, and vice versa.
  • Supply: Direct relationship — price ↑ → supply ↑.
  • Influenced by: consumer income, production costs, market fluctuations.
  • This is Allah's decree — no government interference needed.
Reason 2: Monopoly, Greed, Injustice (Human Fault)

In this case, the ruler has the right and duty to interfere:

  • Crack down on monopolists and cheaters
  • Set prices — ensuring fairness so neither producer/seller is harmed by low prices, nor buyer harmed by high prices
📌 Key Rule
Government does NOT interfere when prices rise naturally (supply/demand). Government DOES interfere when prices rise due to human injustice (monopoly, greed).
🧠 Memory Trick — When Does Government Intervene?
Think of it as a traffic light:
🟢 Natural price rise (supply/demand) = Green — let the market go free.
🔴 Unjust price rise (monopoly/greed) = Red — government must stop and fix it.
💡 Exam Tip
The Prophet's hadith about pricing is crucial — know that he refused to set prices AND gave the reason. Also be clear that the "origin of price is freedom" but this freedom has limits when injustice occurs.

Questions & Answers

Click each question to reveal the answer. Test yourself first!

What is "Relative Scarcity" and why does it matter in Islamic economics?
Relative Scarcity is the impossibility of providing every human with all their needs and desires in the appropriate time, place, and form. It matters because: (1) It motivates work and earth development, (2) It is a test from Allah requiring patience. It does NOT mean the earth lacks enough resources — globally, resources are sufficient for a good life.
What are the three aspects of the economic problem according to Islam?
1. Economic Resources (Production Factors): Work, Capital, and Natural Resources. 2. Human Needs: Must be halal, within basic requirements, limited by moderation — includes spiritual needs too. 3. Production Methods: Must not harm society and must be allowed (halal) in Islam.
Why does Islam reject Malthus's theory?
Three reasons: (1) Some resources are fixed (land) but others renew themselves (fish, forests). (2) Alternatives emerge when natural resources end or disappear. (3) Studies proved Malthus's global predictions were never realised. The Quran confirms that Allah's resources are unlimited (و إن من شيء إلا عندنا خزائنه).
What is the Islamic definition of production? What are its 3 motives?
Definition: Exerting persistent effort in investing wealth resources and increasing yield for the prosperity of society, its existence, and supreme values. 3 Motives: (1) Islam links production to worship — sincere intention makes it ibadah. (2) Humans are Caliphs (khalifa) on earth, responsible for developing it for future generations. (3) Allah made the universe subservient to humanity for the purpose of earth development.
Differentiate between Musaqah and Muzara'ah.
Musaqah: Owner gives existing CROPS to someone who will irrigate and care for them, in exchange for a known share of produce. Evidence: The Prophet's agreement with the people of Khaybar (half the produce). Muzara'ah: Owner gives LAND to someone who will cultivate it from scratch, in exchange for a known share of produce. Evidence: Practice approved by the Prophet (ﷺ). Both require: (1) Worker gets a known fraction (half, third), (2) That fraction is from the entire produce.
What is the difference between Taraf, Israf, and Tabthear?
Taraf (ترف): Luxury — indulging in an extravagant luxury lifestyle. This is the most extreme level. It was the cause of punishment for previous nations. Example: eating/drinking from gold and silver utensils. Israf (إسراف): Exceeding the limit of temperance in spending — less extreme than Taraf. Tabthear (تبذير): Spending money on wrongful and unworthy things. Allah says spendthrifts are "brothers of the devils." All three are prohibited in Islam.
What is "False Bidding" (Najash) and why is it forbidden?
False bidding (Najash) is when a person raises the price of a commodity without intending to buy it, in order to trick another real buyer into paying more. Both the seller and the fake bidder commit a sin. It violates the Islamic principle of honesty in dealings and harms the buyer through deception.
When can the government set prices in Islam, and when must it stay away?
Government MUST stay away when prices rise naturally due to supply and demand — this is Allah's decree. The Prophet (ﷺ) refused to set prices in this case, saying Allah is the one who sets them. Government HAS THE RIGHT to interfere when prices rise due to human injustice — monopolists, greedy traders, or cheating suppliers. In that case, the ruler must crack down on monopolists and set fair prices that don't harm the producer OR the buyer.
What are the rules for selling usurious (ribawi) assets?
For the same type (e.g., gold for gold, riyal for riyal): BOTH equality (same amount) AND immediate exchange (hand to hand) are required. For different types (e.g., gold for silver, riyal for dollar): Different amounts are permissible, but immediate exchange is still required. The usurious goods are: gold, silver, currencies, wheat, dates, barley, and salt.
What is the difference between Saving and Hoarding in Islamic economics?
Saving: Deducting a portion of income for the purpose of investing, enriching heirs, or facing emergencies — WITH paying Zakah. This is encouraged. Hoarding: Withholding money from circulation / treasuring money WITHOUT paying Zakah. This is forbidden in Islam. The Islamic policy is to direct surplus income/savings to investment, not to hoard.
Compare Islamic and non-Islamic concepts of interest/gratification (إشباع).
Non-Islamic: (1) Only material enjoyment, (2) Consumer has absolute authority to consume anything, (3) More consumption = more utility and happiness. Islamic: (1) Both material AND spiritual enjoyment — includes divine reward/punishment dimension, (2) Commodity must be legitimate (halal), (3) Rationality is imperative — extravagance is not allowed. Islam balances enjoyment of this world with preparation for the Hereafter (Quran 28:77).

Key Terms Glossary

Relative Scarcity

Inability to meet all human needs in right time/place/form. Not absolute lack of resources.

Taraf (ترف)

Luxury lifestyle. Most extreme form of overconsumption. Forbidden.

Israf (إسراف)

Exceeding limits of temperance in spending. Less extreme than Taraf.

Tabthear (تبذير)

Spending on wrongful/unworthy things. Spendthrifts = brothers of devils.

Musaqah

Sharecropping of crops — worker irrigates existing crops for a share of produce.

Muzara'ah

Sharecropping of land — worker cultivates bare land for a share of produce.

Riba (ربا)

Usury/interest. Strictly forbidden. Involves unjust increase in exchanging usurious goods.

Najash

False bidding — raising price without intent to buy. Both seller and fake bidder sin.

Hoarding

Withholding money from circulation without paying Zakah. Forbidden.

Mudarabah

Brokerage — one provides capital, one provides effort; profits shared by agreement.

Khalifa (خليفة)

Caliph/Successor — humans as Allah's successors on earth, responsible for its development.

Monopoly (احتكار)

Withholding goods to raise prices. Forbidden — "renounced God" after 40 days.

💡 Final Study Tips
  • Quranic verses: Know at least the topic each verse covers, even if you can't memorise the full text.
  • Comparisons: The Islamic vs non-Islamic comparisons (consumption, gratification) are high-probability exam content.
  • Numbers matter: 3 aspects, 3 motives, 5 work ethics, 5 capital forms, 9 market ethics, 2 pricing reasons — know these counts.
  • Arabic terms: Be able to define Taraf, Israf, Tabthear, Riba, Musaqah, Muzara'ah, Najash.
  • Prophet's sayings: Link each hadith to its topic — examiners often quote a hadith and ask you to explain its context.