Riba,
or interest, is sometimes confused with rent, whereas the two are quite
different from each other.
Rent is a payment made periodically
for the use (not consumption) of an asset, for example for the use of some
land, building a machinery.
On the other hand, two simultaneously
present conditions are present in any transaction which involves Riba.
i) Some benefit (in cash, kind, service
or spirit) over and above the value of the commodity lent is made a condition
by the lender for the loan he gives.
ii) The commodity borrowed, or its
value, is to be ‘recreated’ by the borrower if he uses up the commodity
or part of it so that he may return it, or its value, to the lender.
To use the terminology of accountancy,
Riba is charged on circulating
capital whereas rent is charged on fixed capital. It must be remembered
that the nature of a transaction, not the commodity involved, determines
whether the capital is circulating or fixed. For example, some equipment
hired for producing other goods will be categorised as fixed capital, whereas
the same equipment borrowed as stock-in-trade for sale by a trader who
sells such equipment will be circulating capital.
Illustration
Mr B rents his house to Mr A for one
year at Rs. 500 per month. If in one of these months Mr A does not have
Rs. 500 to pay the rent, he will only have to vacate the house. In other
words, he will have to return the asset he was using. He will not have
to ‘re-create’ the building to return it to the lender. This arrangement
pertains to rent not Riba.
But if Mr A borrows some wheat from
Mr B and has to pay Rs. 100 every month as interest, this arrangement involve
Riba. The reason is that Mr A will
first use up (consume) the wheat and then will have to ‘re-create’ it (or
its value) to return it to Mr B.
In the case of rent, Mr A is never
burdened beyond his ability to pay. If he is unable to pay the rent in
any given month, he will have to vacate the premises at most. However,
in the case of Riba, if he is unable
to pay his dues, the lender has the right to demand not only the interest
but also the ‘re-creation’ of the value of the commodity borrowed by Mr
A, who at this stage, obviously does not even have the ability to pay the
interest.
It is clear that in the case of Riba,
the very nature of the arrangement is indicative of, and indeed based on,
a great deal of indifference, apathy and callousness towards the borrower
by the lending as the arrangement takes no account whatsoever of the conditions
of the borrower before holding him liable for the total payment the it
entails. Occasionally, a situation arises in which the creditor sells the
personal property of the borrower to get the interest and the value of
the commodity loaned.
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