GLOBAL ISLAMIC ECONOMIC REPORT 2025/2026
Looking at the above report and comparing it with conventional/global finance, there is clearly a strong structural tailwind behind both the Islamic consumer economy and Islamic finance globally.
Conventional systems typically grow at ~2–3% GDP and ~4–8% in broader financial assets, but the Islamic economy is consistently outperforming these levels.
Islamic consumer economy is growing from US$2.60T (2024) to US$3.56T (2029), ~12.6% growth. Key sectors: halal food US$1.53T → US$2.06T, travel US$249B → US$424B (fastest), modest fashion US$347B → US$444B, media & recreation US$276B → US$364B, pharma US$112B → US$146B, cosmetics US$92B → US$124B. This shows broad-based expansion across lifestyle, consumption, and digital ecosystems.
Islamic finance grows from US$5.99T → US$9.72T (~10% CAGR), clearly ahead of conventional finance growth averages. It is the backbone enabling the wider ecosystem.
Regionally, Kenya stands out with ~19.7% growth in Islamic finance—well above global averages—showing strong frontier-market adoption and catch-up dynamics.
Bottom line: Islamic economy (~12.6%) and Islamic finance (~10%) are both structurally outpacing conventional benchmarks, with even faster growth in emerging markets like Kenya.
GLOBAL ISLAMIC ECONOMIC REPORT 2025/2026 Looking at the above report and comparing it with conventional/global finance, there is clearly a strong structural tailwind behind both the Islamic consumer economy and Islamic finance globally. Conventional systems typically grow at ~2–3% GDP and...
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