Open Mithqal Dirham/Dinar System - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Open Mithqal Dirham/Dinar System

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Title: Fiqh of Islamic Finance Author: ahmed shleibak Last modified by: mogamat Created Date: 10/8/2003 5:23:44 AM Document presentation format: On-screen Show (4:3) – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Open Mithqal Dirham/Dinar System


1
Open Mithqal Dirham/Dinar System
presented by Prof. Tariq Kahn
2
Man and metals
  • Process Metallurgy is one of the oldest applied
    sciences. Its history can be traced back to 6000
    BC. Admittedly, its form at that time was
    rudimentary, but, to gain a perspective in
    Process Metallurgy, it is worthwhile to spend a
    little time studying the initiation of mankind's
    association with metals.

3
  • Currently there are 86 known metals. Before the
    19th century only 24 of these metals had been
    discovered and, of these 24 metals, 12 were
    discovered in the 18th century. Therefore, from
    the discovery of the first metals - gold and
    copper until the end of the 17th century, some
    7700 years, only 12 metals were known.

4
  • Four of these metals, arsenic, antimony , zinc
    and bismuth , were discovered in the thirteenth
    and fourteenth centuries, while platinum was
    discovered in the 16th century. The other seven
    metals, known as the Metals of Antiquity, were
    the metals upon which ancient civilisation was
    based.

5
  • These seven metals were
  • (1) Gold (ca) 6000BC
  • (2) Copper,(ca) 4200BC
  • (3) Silver,(ca) 4000BC
  • (4) Lead, (ca) 3500BC
  • (5) Tin, (ca) 1750BC
  • (6) Iron,smelted, (ca) 1500BC
  • (7) Mercury, (ca) 750BC

6
  • These metals were known to the Mesopotamians,
    Egyptians, Greeks and the Romans. Of the seven
    metals, five can be found in their native states,
    e.g., gold, silver, copper, iron (from meteors)
    and mercury. However, the occurrence of these
    metals was not abundant and the first two metals
    to be used widely were gold and copper. And, of
    course, the history of metals is closely linked
    to that of coins and gemstones

7
  • Thus we find the first problem in process
    metallurgy The metal deposit must be
    identified. In the case of the first metals color
    was the most important factor as it allowed the
    metal to be recognized in surrounding rock,
    stones, gravel and dirt (gangue) and separated.
    Clearly, after recognition, separation is next
    problem followed by concentration.

8
  • These three steps are very important and the
    economics of these steps usually define whether
    it is viable to produce the metal from a set
    deposit. In the early days all three steps were
    carried out simultaneously. Gold is widely
    dispersed throughout the earths crust (0.005 ppm)
    at a very small level, therefore, it is very
    important to find naturally occurring
    concentrations. The scarcity of gold and its
    value, due to mankinds fascination with its
    color, have lead to gold being the one of the
    more important metals in daily life alongside
    silver, which was often associated with it.

9
The karat scale
10
Gold Quality
  • Gold's purity is measured in karats. The term
    "karat" harks back to the ancient bazaars where
    "carob" beans were used to weigh precious metals.
    24 karat is pure gold, but its purity means it is
    more expensive and less durable than gold that is
    alloyed with other metals. Different alloys are
    used in jewelry for greater strength, durability
    and color range.

11
  • The karatage of the jewelry will tell you what
    percentage of gold it contains 24 karat is 100
    percent, 18 karat is 75 percent, and 14 karat is
    58 percent gold. When comparing gold jewelry, the
    higher the number of karats, the greater the
    value.
  • Thus 1 karat 4.16 of Gold
  • Karat is therefore a measure of purity, not
    weight, although there is a obvious relation.

12
Silver
  • Although silver was found freely in nature, its
    occurrence was rare. Silver is the most
    chemically active of the noble metals, is harder
    than gold but softer than copper. It ranks second
    in ductility and malleability to gold. It is
    normally stable in pure air and water but
    tarnishes when exposed to ozone, hydrogen sulfide
    or sulfur. Due to its softness, pure silver was
    used for ornaments, jewelry and as a measure of
    wealth. In a manner similar to gold, native
    silver can easily be formed. Silver's symbol is
    Ag from the latin argentum.

13
  • Another development in metal processing was the
    discovery that if bone ash was added to lead
    oxide, the lead oxide would be adsorbed and a
    large amount of material containing silver could
    be processed. By 2500 BC the cupellation process
    was the normal mode of silver manufacture.

14
Ancient African Kindoms and Gold and Silver trade
  • Ibn al-Faquh, an Iranian scholar compiling
    material for an encyclopedia of the Muslim world,
    wrote the following CE. 900
  • It is said that beyond the source of the Nile
    is darkness and beyond the darkness are waters,
    which make the gold growto the town of Ghana is
    a three months journey through deserts.
  • Al-Bakri, a historian in Cardob3, later used
    travelers and traders reports to describe the
    Kingdom of Ghana in his Book of Roads and
    Kingdoms, CE 1068. He wrote
  • Ghanais a title given to their kings the name
    of the region in Awkar, and their present king,
    who came to the throne in 1063, is Tunka Manin.
    He rules an enormous kingdom, and has great
    powerWhen he calls up his army he can put
    200,000 men in the field, more than 40,000 of
    them archers (Davidson, 1984,p. 90).

15
MITKAL
  • Also romanized as mitgal and mithkal. From
    pre-Islamic times to the present, an Arabic unit
    of mass for gold and precious stones.

16
  • In Africa, 13th 20th centuries, the principal
    unit of mass in the trade in gold dust between
    West and North Africa, 1/6th of the North
    African trade ounce, about 4.5 grams. The trade
    ounce was descended from the Roman ounce, which
    had been similarly divided into 6 sextarii.

17
  • According to Garrard (1980),  the eastern part of
    the Akan area, in what is now Ghana, tended to
    use a weight series based on this mitkal, while
    to the west, in present-day Ivory Coast, a series
    based on the trade ounce was more common. He
    explains the difference by the difference in
    predominant trade items Ghana produced more gold
    dust, while the future Ivoriens traded ivory and
    other more massive items.
  •  

18
  • In North Africa and the Sahel, for coined gold
    the mitkal (or dinar) was reckoned at 6 2/3
    mitkals to the ounce, so the mitkal was about 4.5
    grams.
  • In Mande, a language often used in trade in West
    Africa, the word was metikale.

19
  • In the Sudan, a unit of mass 40 habba. The
    mitgal equals 40 habba of gold, and the kirat 10
    habba (i.e., 1 mitgal 4 kirats), One mitqal is
    thus about 1½ dirhem, about 4.4 to 4.68 grams
    (72.22 grains of barley cut to uncut)

20
  • In the Umdatus Salik ala Madhab Imam ShafiI,
    Imam Nawawi is related on Zakaat.
  • Imam Nawawi states the amount for Zakaat Nisab,
    interestingly, related to the Mithqal and not the
    dinar, and relates the dirham to the mithqal.

21
  • He says
  • Wa nisabu al-dhahabi ashroona mithqallan wa
    zakaatu nasf mithqallin.
  • the nisaab for zakaat on Gold is 20 mithqals and
    the zakaat payable is ½ a mithqal

22
  • Again when it comes to silver, he says
  • Wa zakaatu hamsatu dirhama
  • the zakaat on nisab of silver is 5 dirhams.

23
  • In the Umdatus Salik ala Madhab Imam Malik, Imam
    AbulHasan Shadhili says
  • fa nisaabi adh-dhahabi ashroona dinaran
  • Here clearly, even in the textual usage the dinar
    is estblished as ONE mithqal between the
    comparison of the texts of the Malikis and the
    Shafiis

24
  • Thus historically the two terms have been used
    interchangebly, the dinar refering to currency,
    and the mithqal to the weight factor.
  • The weight and the measure is crucial to the
    establishment of the currency of the Muslims as
    this affects the honesty of trade and exchange,
    as well as the matter of nisaab in Zakaat.

25
  • Now we know the traditional rate of equivalence
    according to the Sharia rulings in all the
    classical deductions, is
  • 10 dirhams 1 dinar
  • Thus according to the nisaab ruling of 0.5
    mithqal 5 dirhams verifies the 10 x ruling in
    terms of nisaab equivalence.

26
  • NOTE the difference.
  • The weight ratio is 1 ½ dirham by weight 1
    mithqal (dinar) by weight.
  • This is weight NOT value!
  • The exchange rate is determined by the nisaab
    ruling during the classical period of 0.5 mithqal
    5 dirhams in VALUE. The metals have different
    value.

27
  • It leads us however to a tricky problem. We the
    Muslims are NO LONGER IN CHARGE OF THE CURRENCY
    EXCHANGE RATE FOR GOLD AND SILVER! Thus we have
    to start somewhere in the process where we can
    cost effectively return to the sunnah currency,
    as silver is undervalued at times by 72 times
    below gold.

28
  • This setting of the GOLD price, in London, known
    as the London FIXING, traditionally by a
    Rothchild, shows clearly how the Judification of
    value and the transvaluation of values have
    occurred on a global scale.
  • The London fixing, or any gold valuation based in
    London and attached to this terror mechanism
    SHOULD BE REJECTED by Muslims working towards the
    estblishment of bi-metal currencies.

29
  • The best option to start the minting of OPEN
    SOURCE currency, would then be to make use of the
    low value of SILVER, and to start minting our
    REAL SHARIA COMPLIANT CURRENCY, in Dirhams, based
    of the weight factors described above.

30
  • 72 grains of barley, have been found to accord,
    statistically, to about 4.4 -4.5 grams,
  • Making the minimum nisab at around 88 to 90grams
    of gold.
  • The general ruling in Sharia is to be
    precautious, not stingy.

31
  • On the mithqal equivalency by WEIGHT, the nisaab
    for SILVER DIRHAM or otherwise, is then
    determined as 587 to 600 grams of silver. This
    allows a weight factor variation of 2.93 to
    3.01grams to the coin. Again the higher the
    better in terms of being open handed rather than
    closed fisted.

32
Coin Forgeries
  • Very difficult traditionally unless pure gold is
    not the object under discussion, and very
    expensive even today, when rare metals, such as
    tantallum in alloys prove unstable.
  • If electrum and white gold is in use, then of
    course the nature of the forgery is enhanced.
    Similarly with silver, unless pure silver is used.

33
Typical forged coin vs real (left)
34
  • a fake "Gold coin" dating from 1775, made of a
    ternary alloy Au (30), Ag (21), Cu (49) and
    gilded by mercury process. The selection of such
    a costly alloy was observed and it is shown that
    this derives neither from technical imperatives,
    nor from cost considerations. The cost of these
    forgeries was in that time a useless financial
    exercise and was quickly halted.

35
Development of an locally reproducible industrial
process for minting an Open Mithqal standard type
intrinsic value coin
  • This part of the presentation introduces a
    technology for localized minting of intrinsic
    value bimetallic coins. The main objective of
    this work is to present the theoretical and
    experimental results obtained during the
    development of the process, which are essential
    for producing this type of coin.

36
  • The theoretical analysis was based on the
    utilization of the finite-element method to
    characterize metal movement, to establish the
    process sequence and related disk geometries,
    and to design an appropriate geometry for the
    mechanical parts. The practical implementation
    was based on a low cost mechanical press and the
    blanking modules, press and dies were
    re-engineered to achieve the overall objective.

37
  • Experiments consisted on the coinage of several
    prototypes in copper in order to confirm the
    theoretical predictions and to validate the
    proposed technology, which latter can be seen as
    an alternative to the existing coin technology
    based on centralized mints and mass production
    in large centers away from the users of the
    prospective coins.

38
Suggestions by Ahmad Adjie
  • The Open Mithqal Standard will have a guidance
    for physical looks of the coins. Currently what
    we have as an advisory is
  • Coins must show mint name, year struck, weight
    in ty oz pure gold/silver - - - in the commonly
    used calendar, language and script of the
    community which the mint/guarantor/authority is
    situated and where the coins will be used - - -
    e.g. in English saying INM Cape Town, 2011, 1/10
    oz or 3 gram fine silver.
  • Coins may additionally show weight in
    mithqal/dirham, guarantor/authority, date struck
    - - - in any calendar, language and script of
    choice - - - e.g. in Japanese saying the japanese
    date, 3.5 mithqal, Abdullah Ibrahim Yamasaki
  • Coins may additionally show Month and/or Date
    struck - - - in the common language and calendar.

39
  • It is highly recommended for prudent quality
    control for the coins to show a batch number/code
    and/or design that can be traced back to the
    original dates of production and logged
    manufacturing notes that is safely kept within
    each mint under the full access and knowledge of
    the authority/guarantor and shall be open to the
    public.
  • Any bas-relief or design of the obverse and
    reverse of the coins can be used by each mint,
    following any principle the mint uses. The art of
    the Muslims of the world depicting
    inanimately-referring forms is highly
    recommended. However, the first batch of each
    independent mint/authority must be as
    economically feasible and efficient for the first
    strikings so much so that the designs can be made
    simpler e.g. for the first 1,000 coins.
  • Any edge serrations may be used as well as edge
    reliefs added for thicker coins, blank is also
    acceptable, however, a raised ring edge is highly
    recommended (though not a must) protecting the
    center's obverse and reverse reliefs.

40
WIM (Wakala or World Islamic Mint)
  • WIM was instituted by Umar Vadilo and currently
    produce coins in the UAE for world distribution.
    The costs of the coins are however heavily
    influence by handling and surcharges altering the
    price by 25 in cases.
  • In my opinion this is untennable, and makes the
    coin a commemorative medallion.

41
Open Source and Free MINTS
  • Islamic Mint Nusantra, founded by Ahmad Adjie and
    Abbas Firman have been producing good quality
    coins and consistent low manufacturing costs.
  • The free Mint of Amir Abullah in the United
    States was another early mint that operated on a
    silver dirham standard, albeit a 10 dirham
    version.

42
  • We have successfully completed the Cape Town
    Mint, with the hard work and incredible
    perseverance of Amir Muhamad Abrahams, and with
    the input of Sidi Abdurahman Phillips, a jeweler
    of renown in the Cape.
  • All the details will be made availble as open
    source for any Amirate that may want to copy this
    design and mint dirhams and dinars, following the
    guidelines that we will provide.

43
  • Thank you
  • Any questions?
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