This article is written to provide a deliberation reviews on the current context of Islamic financial literacy among students. A research was conducted through case studies carried out among the students of University Malaysia Sabah Campus W.P. Labuan and Institut Pendidikan Guru (IPG), Kampus Batu Lintang, Sarawak, a teacher training institute. The respondents are candidates to become teachers upon completing their studies. Being knowledgeable and having skill in financial literacy, especially with respect to Islamic financial products, would be a great asset to them. Based on current scenario, financial literacy in Islamic financial products should be enhanced, especially to the academicians. The findings from this research is expected to be able to determine the factors influencing Islamic financial literacy among the students. This study employs a quantitative method using questionnaires distribution for analysis puposes. Data are collected through a survey using a closed ended questionnaire. Overall, the objective of this study is to determine the determinant factors towards Islamic financial literacy among students. The implications and recommendations are provided.
Purpose This study aims to examine the impact of sustainable practices as proxied by the environmental, social and governance (ESG) score on capital structure. It also investigates whether ESG performance influences the speed of adjustment (SOA) to target leverage in firms. Design/methodology/approach The sample covers 116 non-financial firms listed on the main stock exchanges from five Southeast ASEAN countries (Bursa Malaysia, Indonesia Stock Exchange, Philippines Stock Exchange, Singapore Stock Exchange and Stock Exchange of Thailand) over the period 2012–2019. The study adopts the OLS regression and system-GMM estimators to perform the data analysis. Findings The authors show that the ESG score is positively associated with book leverage, suggesting that firms increase their debt capital through sustainable practices. However, they find that the ESG score is negatively associated with market leverage across our model estimations. The authors also reveal that environmental, social and governance pillar scores produce about 7.82%, 2.88% and 0.47% SOAs, respectively, higher than the SOA of the traditional SOA without the ESG factor. The aggregate ESG score has about 3.41% SOA higher than the baseline SOA without the ESG factor. Practical implications This study is of interest to investors, corporate firms and policymakers. The study demonstrates that the ESG score increases the firm’s SOA to target leverage. By disaggregating the ESG score, the authors establish that ESG pillar scores produce higher SOAs than the traditional SOA (without ESG), with the environmental score inducing the fastest SOA. Practically, the study implies that environmentally sustainable activities reduce environmental transaction costs, benefit firms through better information transparency and enhance a trustful climate between the firm and suppliers of capital. Therefore, this study demonstrates that firms do not only incur the cost of disseminating ESG information but also benefit from lower information asymmetry and a higher SOA with better tax-deductible advantages. Social implications The findings have combined advantages for both stakeholders and directors who monitor and manage the firms’ resources to improve the quality of ESG practices and initiatives. Originality/value To the best of the authors’ knowledge, this study is among the first to establish that sustainable practices induce higher debt capital. Secondly, unlike prior research focusing on the cost of capital, the authors examine whether ESG performance affects capital structure patterns. Thirdly, it documents the extent to which sustainable practices influence the SOA towards target leverage in firms. The authors contribute to corporate finance literature that firms reach faster to their target leverage in the presence of ESG performance. Theoretically, through the notion of the stakeholder proposition, the study establishes that the firms’ pursuance of stakeholder goals further enhances the prediction of the trade-off theory.
Determining 2 values of fuzzy measure prior to applying Choquet integral normally turns into a complex undertaking, especially when the decision problem entails a large number of evaluation attributes,. Many patterns of fuzzy measure have thus been suggested to deal with this complexity.-measure is one such pattern. However, the original-measure identification method was found to be unsuccessful in providing clear-cut indications on the relationships held by the attributes. A revised version of the method was then introduced to tackle this issue, but unfortunately it requires a large amount of initial data from the respondents compared to the original method. This paper therefore proposes an alternate version of-measure identification method that synchronously compensates the shortcomings associated with each existing method. The proposed method uses interpretive structural modelling (ISM) to uncover the actual relationships held by the attributes. The outputs of ISM (i.e. digraph, driving power and dependence power) are then utilised to determine the inputs required to identify the complete set of-measure values. A supplier selection problem was used to demonstrate the feasibility of the method. Also, the usability of the method was compared over the existing ones. .
As a result of the West African region's continuous political and economic instability, various economies have used monetary policy changes to respond to shocks from macroeconomic causes. Scholars disagree on the mechanisms of monetary policy, external shocks, and macroeconomic activity links in an economy, according to the available literature in both inter-regional and intra-regional evaluations. This article promotes understanding and management of external shocks in monetary policy by focusing on two key goals. (1) To investigate external shocks, macroeconomic performance, and the dynamics of monetary policy in Western African countries. (2) Use the S-VAR method of estimate to investigate the impact of these economic indices on monetary policy dynamics in Nigeria, Ghana, Cameroon, and Niger. The S-VAR method was chosen because it is useful for analysing macroeconomic shocks and monetary policy transmission. The findings reveal that the West African countries are so interconnected, any change in the price of non-oil commodities would have a significant impact on the exchange rate, which will be channelled through policy rates to GDP. We recommend and emphasise the need of diversifying member countries' productive and export bases rather than continuing to rely on one or a few items as the primary source of income.
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