Expected effects of joining the World Trade Organization on the Islamic banking sector in Libya
Keywords:
World Trade Organization - WTO, Islamic Banks, Islamic Banking, GATS - General Agreement on Trade in Services, Financial Services, Competitiveness, Banking Sector, Liberalization of Trade in Services, Bank Concentration, Libyan EconomyAbstract
The study primarily aimed to highlight the nature and economic impacts expected from joining Libya to the World Trade Organization and implementing the General Agreement on Trade in Services (GATS)—specifically its provisions on financial services—- on the Islamic banking sector in Libya. The study concluded that the net positive or negative effects are largely dependent on the effective use of the period preceding and following the accession for reforming the banking sector, alongside managing the controlled, gradual exposure of this sector to foreign competition. Besides to that it depends on selecting the most appropriate alternatives for the expected implementation of GATS. In this context, the alternative of controlled openness of the banking sector to foreign competition was chosen due to its advantages over other alternatives.
Downloads
References
Downloads
Published
Issue
Section
License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.
Authors are the copyright holders and grant Tebyan Journal of Islamic Studies copyright to their works licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial (CC-BY-NC) licenses. This allows others, with acknowledgement of authorship, to quote, remix, and build upon the work noncommercially (for example, by publishing it in a book or posting it in an institutional repository) as long as they acknowledge Tebyan Journal of Islamic Studies' prior publication.