BENEFITS THAT ISLAMIC AND CONVENTIONAL BANKS CAN ATTAIN BY IMPLEMENTING GREEN BANKING

This paper aims to ascertain the benefits that Islamic and conventional banks in Bangladesh can reap by implementing green banking, and also the drivers that motivate banks to behave environmentally. The Green Compliance Index (GCI) was introduced here to measure banks’ environmental behaviour. It w...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Kashfia Sharmeen, Ahsan Mahbub Yeaman
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Bank Indonesia 2020-09-01
Series:Journal of Islamic Monetary Economics and Finance
Subjects:
Online Access:https://jimf-bi.org/index.php/JIMF/article/view/1134
id doaj-f9eb778b1cb849bd8a42e276e0cef51b
record_format Article
spelling doaj-f9eb778b1cb849bd8a42e276e0cef51b2020-12-14T04:40:55ZengBank IndonesiaJournal of Islamic Monetary Economics and Finance2460-61462460-66182020-09-016410.21098/jimf.v6i4.11341134BENEFITS THAT ISLAMIC AND CONVENTIONAL BANKS CAN ATTAIN BY IMPLEMENTING GREEN BANKINGKashfia Sharmeen0Ahsan Mahbub YeamanBangladesh Institute of Capital Market (BICM)This paper aims to ascertain the benefits that Islamic and conventional banks in Bangladesh can reap by implementing green banking, and also the drivers that motivate banks to behave environmentally. The Green Compliance Index (GCI) was introduced here to measure banks’ environmental behaviour. It was prepared based on central bank guidelines. In this study, with the participation of all 40 private commercial banks (PCBs), 32 conventional banks and 8 Islami Shariah-based PCBs, firm specific variables were collected through content analysis of the GCI. Structural equation modelling-partial least squares (SEM-PLS), together with the bootstrapping method, were used to evaluate the research data. These were collected and sorted from the FY annual report of 2018. For further support, a generalized linear model (GLM) was used to assess the outcomes. The results show that the effects of green compliance on possible benefits are significantly higher for Islamic banks. In contrast, these banks comply less with the green banking codes than conventional banks do in Bangladesh. Company size and the independence of bank directors appear to have a significant influence on compliance with the green banking codes, while governance does not show such an association for either group of banks. As Islamic banks have a greater scope to attain benefits, policymakers should introduce more interactive green banking products and loan schemes for prospective consumers, especially in industrial sectors where there is a greater possibility of being sustainable and environmentally friendly. Based on the findings, policy recommendations are made for practitioners, regulators and future researchers.https://jimf-bi.org/index.php/JIMF/article/view/1134green complianceclimate changeislamic banksconventional banksgreen banking benefits
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kashfia Sharmeen
Ahsan Mahbub Yeaman
spellingShingle Kashfia Sharmeen
Ahsan Mahbub Yeaman
BENEFITS THAT ISLAMIC AND CONVENTIONAL BANKS CAN ATTAIN BY IMPLEMENTING GREEN BANKING
Journal of Islamic Monetary Economics and Finance
green compliance
climate change
islamic banks
conventional banks
green banking benefits
author_facet Kashfia Sharmeen
Ahsan Mahbub Yeaman
author_sort Kashfia Sharmeen
title BENEFITS THAT ISLAMIC AND CONVENTIONAL BANKS CAN ATTAIN BY IMPLEMENTING GREEN BANKING
title_short BENEFITS THAT ISLAMIC AND CONVENTIONAL BANKS CAN ATTAIN BY IMPLEMENTING GREEN BANKING
title_full BENEFITS THAT ISLAMIC AND CONVENTIONAL BANKS CAN ATTAIN BY IMPLEMENTING GREEN BANKING
title_fullStr BENEFITS THAT ISLAMIC AND CONVENTIONAL BANKS CAN ATTAIN BY IMPLEMENTING GREEN BANKING
title_full_unstemmed BENEFITS THAT ISLAMIC AND CONVENTIONAL BANKS CAN ATTAIN BY IMPLEMENTING GREEN BANKING
title_sort benefits that islamic and conventional banks can attain by implementing green banking
publisher Bank Indonesia
series Journal of Islamic Monetary Economics and Finance
issn 2460-6146
2460-6618
publishDate 2020-09-01
description This paper aims to ascertain the benefits that Islamic and conventional banks in Bangladesh can reap by implementing green banking, and also the drivers that motivate banks to behave environmentally. The Green Compliance Index (GCI) was introduced here to measure banks’ environmental behaviour. It was prepared based on central bank guidelines. In this study, with the participation of all 40 private commercial banks (PCBs), 32 conventional banks and 8 Islami Shariah-based PCBs, firm specific variables were collected through content analysis of the GCI. Structural equation modelling-partial least squares (SEM-PLS), together with the bootstrapping method, were used to evaluate the research data. These were collected and sorted from the FY annual report of 2018. For further support, a generalized linear model (GLM) was used to assess the outcomes. The results show that the effects of green compliance on possible benefits are significantly higher for Islamic banks. In contrast, these banks comply less with the green banking codes than conventional banks do in Bangladesh. Company size and the independence of bank directors appear to have a significant influence on compliance with the green banking codes, while governance does not show such an association for either group of banks. As Islamic banks have a greater scope to attain benefits, policymakers should introduce more interactive green banking products and loan schemes for prospective consumers, especially in industrial sectors where there is a greater possibility of being sustainable and environmentally friendly. Based on the findings, policy recommendations are made for practitioners, regulators and future researchers.
topic green compliance
climate change
islamic banks
conventional banks
green banking benefits
url https://jimf-bi.org/index.php/JIMF/article/view/1134
work_keys_str_mv AT kashfiasharmeen benefitsthatislamicandconventionalbankscanattainbyimplementinggreenbanking
AT ahsanmahbubyeaman benefitsthatislamicandconventionalbankscanattainbyimplementinggreenbanking
_version_ 1724383893602172928