ENHANCING THE EFFICIENCY OF ISLAMIC FINANCING MECHANISMS IN EMERGING ECONOMIES: EVIDENCE FROM MURABAHA-BASED INSTRUMENTS AND PUBLIC-PRIVATE INVESTMENT MODELS
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19996047Keywords:
Islamic finance; Murabaha; public-private partnership; “50–1” model; differentiated mark-up pricing; tranchebased pricing; reutilisation facility; liquidity management; investment efficiency; emerging economies; banking profitabilityAbstract
This study examines innovative mechanisms for enhancing the efficiency and sustainability of Islamic financing
in emerging economies, with a particular focus on the production and service sectors. The relevance of the research is
driven by the growing demand for Shariah-compliant financial instruments capable of effectively supporting large-scale
investment projects while ensuring financial stability and ethical integrity. The study proposes an integrated framework
based on four key mechanisms: short-term large-scale Murabaha-based financing, the “50–1” public-private capital structure
model, differentiated mark-up pricing, and a reutilisation facility for liquidity optimization
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