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Indonesian Islamic moral incentives in credit card debt repayment: a feature selection using various data mining

Rezzy Eko Caraka (Faculty of Economics and Business, Universitas Indonesia, Depok, Indonesia)
Fahmi Ali Hudaefi (Darussalam Institute of Islamic Studies, Ciamis, West Java, Indonesia)
Prana Ugiana (Department of Mathematics, University of Sumatera Utara, Medan, North Sumatera, Indonesia)
Toni Toharudin (Department of Statistics, Padjadjaran University, West Java, Indonesia)
Avia Enggar Tyasti (International Trade of ASEAN and RRT Region, Polytechnic of APP, DKI Jakarta, Indonesia)
Noor Ell Goldameir (Department of Mathematics, Statistics study program, Riau University, Pekanbaru, Riau, Indonesia)
Rung Ching Chen (Department of Information ManagementChaoyang University of Technology, Taiwan (ROC))

International Journal of Islamic and Middle Eastern Finance and Management

ISSN: 1753-8394

Article publication date: 21 October 2021

Issue publication date: 18 January 2022

445

Abstract

Purpose

Despite the practice of credit card services by Islamic financial institutions (IFIs) is debatable, Islamic banks (IBs) have been offering this product. Both Muslim and non-Muslim customers have subscribed to the products. Thus, it is critical to analyse the strategy of IBs’ moral messages in reminding their Muslim and non-Muslim customers to repay their credit card debts. This paper aims to investigate this issue in Indonesia using data mining via machine learning.

Design/methodology/approach

This study examines the IBs’ customers across the 32 provinces of Indonesia regarding their moral status in credit card debt repayment. This work considers 6,979 observations of the variables that affect the moral status of the IBs’ customers in repaying their debt. The five types of data mining via machine learning (i.e. Boruta, logistic regression, Bayesian regression, random forest, XGBoost and spatial cluster) are used. Boruta, random forest and XGBoost are used to select the important features to investigate the moral aspects. Bayesian regression is used to get the odds and opportunity for the transition of each variable and spatially formed based on the information from the logistical intercepts. The best method is selected based on the highest accuracy value to deliver the information on the relationship between moral status categories in the selected 32 provinces in Indonesia.

Findings

A different variable on moral status in each province is found. The XGBoost finds an accuracy value of 93.42%, which the three provincial groups have the same information based on the importance of the variables. The strategy of IBs’ moral messages by sending the verse of al-Qur’an and al-Hadith (traditions or sayings of the Prophet Muhammad PBUH) and simple messages reminders do not impact the customers’ repaying their debts. Both Muslim and non-Muslim groups are primarily found in the non-moral group.

Research limitations/implications

This study does not consider socio-economic demographics and culture. This limitation calls future works to consider such factors when conducting a similar topic.

Practical implications

The industry professionals can take benefit from this study to understand the Indonesian customers’ moral status in repaying credit card debt. In addition, future works may advance the recent findings by considering socio-cultural factors to investigate the moral status approach to Islamic credit warnings that is not covered by this study.

Social implications

This work finds that religious text of credit card repayment reminders sent to Muslims in several provinces of Indonesia does not affect their decision to repay their debts. To some extent, this finding draws a social issue that the local IBs need to consider when implementing the strategy of credit card repayment reminders.

Originality/value

This study credits a novelty in the discourse of data science for Islamic finance practices. Specifically, this study pioneers an example of using data mining to investigate Islamic-moral incentives in credit card debt repayment.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

This work was made possible through the best research performance, Indonesian Association of Islamic Economists (IAEI) and Financial Services Authority (OJK), under grant [OJK FREKS XVI-2019], awarded to the first author (Dr Rezzy Eko Caraka). This work was supported by the Faculty of Business and Economics, Universitas Indonesia. We also thank Prof Youngjo Lee, Department of Statistics, Seoul National University for assistance in the construction of machine learning.

Conflicts of interest/competing interests: We confirm that there is no conflict of interest in our manuscript.

Availability of data and material: The analysis code data sets used in this article are available from the corresponding author upon reasonable request.

Citation

Caraka, R.E., Hudaefi, F.A., Ugiana, P., Toharudin, T., Tyasti, A.E., Goldameir, N.E. and Chen, R.C. (2022), "Indonesian Islamic moral incentives in credit card debt repayment: a feature selection using various data mining", International Journal of Islamic and Middle Eastern Finance and Management, Vol. 15 No. 1, pp. 100-124. https://doi.org/10.1108/IMEFM-08-2020-0408

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2021, Emerald Publishing Limited

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