A recent New York Times article is a painful reminder of this fallacy of profitability being good in the arena of microfinance. My understanding of the ancient rules of usury (which predate Islam, and Islamic scripture never claimed that it introduced a new prohibition in this regard) is that the extension of credit for profit (whether through direct interest-based lending, as in conventional banking, or through credit sales and leases, as in "Islamic finance") is the essence of usury. It defeats the social insurance aspect, and easily turns profit motives into predatory incentives on the part of lenders and irresponsible spending on the part of borrowers (and, again, structuring the loan through credit sales or leases changes nothing in this regard!).
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