Participation banking is a name given to Islamic banks mainly in Turkey, as well as in the broader MENA region. There are participation banks in Turkey, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Indonesia, Saudi Arabia, Malaysia, the UAE and other Gulf countries.
Participation banks operate on Islamic financial principles distinguished from conventional banking:
Participation banking share of assets in the Turkish banking sector was 2.13% in 2000, 5.1% in 2012, and reached 7.8% or 717.3 billion TL in 2021.
In 2020, top total sukuk issuers included: Malaysia, Saudi Arabia, and Indonesia.
According to Ernst & Young, the assets of global participation banking reached US $930 billion in 2015, with growth rates declining across all regions compared to previous years.
Integration of Islamic banking principles with modern monetary systems presents opportunities and challenges for financial reform. Islamic central banks have limited conventional monetary policy instruments.
The sector has gained international recognition through regulatory frameworks. The International Monetary Fund Executive Board endorsed a proposal on the use of the Core Principles for Islamic Finance Regulation, which were developed by the Islamic Financial Services Board.
From a monetary reform standpoint, participation banking presents both opportunities and challenges:
Opportunities:
Challenges: