Islamic Financial Services Board
The Islamic Financial Services Board is an international standard-setting body of regulatory and supervisory agencies that aims to promote the soundness and stability of Islamic financial services. It studies and recommends standards consistent with Sharî'ah principles to financial institutions covering the areas of banking, capital market and insurance.
The IFSB was originally established to serve banking sector regulators and central banks, extending its mandate to include supervisors and regulators of insurance and securities markets in 2004 and 2005 respectively.
History
The IFSB was founded by "a consortium of central banks" and the Islamic Development Bank in 2002 and began operations on 10 March 2003. The country of its location, Malaysia, passed a special law the same year —the Islamic Financial Services Board Act 2002—giving the IFSB the usual "immunities and privileges" international organizations receive.The Nine Founding Members that signed the Articles of Agreement on 3 November 2002 are the following:
- Central Bank of Bahrain
- Bank Indonesia
- Central Bank of the Islamic Republic of Iran
- Central Bank of Kuwait
- Bank Negara Malaysia
- State Bank of Pakistan
- Saudi Arabian Monetary Agency
- Central Bank of Sudan
- Islamic Development Bank
Mission
The mission of the IFSB is to promote the stability and resilience of the Islamic financial services industry. The IFSB seeks to achieve its mission through the issuance, and facilitating the implementation, of global and prudential and supervisory standards and other initiatives that foster knowledge sharing and cooperation.Membership
, the 187 members of the IFSB comprise 79 regulatory and supervisory authorities, 9 international inter-governmental organisations, and 99 market players operating in 57 jurisdictions.Books
Category:Financial regulation
Category:International finance institutions