Abstract

This article aims to provide an overview of the development of research on the measurement of Islamic banking performance over the past 20 years from 89 selected papers with Scopus-indexed journals ranked Q4 to Q1 or accredited with Sinta 2 to Sinta 1. This study used a qual-quantitative meta-analysis approach using the Mendeley citation application. The distribution of the topic and the depth of research in paper samples based on keywords in publications were analyzed using the VOSviewer application. The results of the analysis showed that the research trend of Islamic banking performance in reputable journals is increasing in recent years. Most of the studies performed in the last two decades have focused on the practice and corporate governance of Islamic banks and comparisons between Islamic and conventional banks based on financial performance ratios and aspect of maqasid al-Shariah; Only a few studies that discuss efficiency, social performance on Islamic banks, regulation, intellectual capital and stability of the financial performance of Islamic banks were found. The further discussion is an empirical exposure without theoretical exploration or analysis which is supposed to become the direction of banking research in the future.
 JEL Classification Codes: G21, L25, P17, P47.

Highlights

  • Islamic banks come to answer the risk of endemic financial transactions that occur in the world (Hassan & Aliyu, 2018)

  • Islamic Banking Financial Performance: Comparative Study Comparative studies have always been an interesting issue for research on the performance of Islamic banking, both between Islamic banks (IBs) in one country, with conventional banks (CBs), foreign banks, and those across countries

  • And Bakar (2003) who examined the financial performance of Shariahschemed banks in Malaysia found that Islamic banks recorded high Return on Asset (ROA) achievements but with low efficiency due to the utilization of their overhead costs

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Summary

Introduction

Islamic banks come to answer the risk of endemic financial transactions that occur in the world (Hassan & Aliyu, 2018). Various studies found that interest, gambling, speculation, and derivative transactions, all of which are prohibited in the principles of Islamic law adhered to by Islamic banks, are factors that cause financial crises (Akber & Dey, 2020; Hassan & Aliyu, 2018; Khan, 2010). Several studies revealed that Islamic banks as competitors of conventional ones had become a diversion in the financial world to sustain a country‟s resilience to exogenous shocks caused by the global financial crisis (Alexakis et al, 2019; Beck et al, 2013; Berger et al, 2019). Goals, and future activities are set arranged by management by looking at the https://www.cribfb.com/journal/index.php/ijibfr

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