consumer perception of Islamic banks: the case of Saudi Arabia
There is no clear line and distinction between Islamic and conventional banks in Saudi Arabia. Banks which are perceived as non-Islamic banks do offer various types of Islamic banking products beside their conventional products. Some of the banks are full-fledged Islamic banks. But the Saudi Arabian banks do not carry the word “Islamic” in their names, as it obtains in U.A.E, Malaysia, Pakistan etc. So, it is hypothesized that the general public might not attach significance to the distinction between Islamic and conventional banks. This paper is conducted to assess the perceptions of Saudi Arabian people on Islamic banking in Saudi Arabia, and to draw conclusions from their views about the degree of the Shariah compliance of the Islamic banking practice. The results of this paper imply that the customers are generally satisfied with the Islamic banking practice, but they want them to do more than current level because they perceive that their banking operations are just marginally Shariah compliant. The customers also generally disapprove of the window Islamic banking by the conventional banks.
This paper argues that an electricity demand should be estimated simultaneously with the supply. It
then estimates the demand for and the supply of the electricity…
This paper investigates the short-run and the long-run oil demand elasticities in Saudi Arabia for the
period 1980-2009, using auto-regressive and co-integration…
This paper using cross-sectional data on 39 Sub-Saharan African countries examines how political and
economic governance affect the most recent data on poverty for…