| India
– The Cutting Edge Destination For Diamonds…
From the African mines to the hands of skilled
cutters and polishers in India, the diamond makes yet another crucial
stop while on its mine-to-market journey. It is here in Surat, India,
that the rough stone is made to reveal its brilliance.
Whether you live in the United States or Japan, if you buy a diamond
ring today, there is a good chance the stone was crafted in India.
An
estimated 92 percent of the world's diamonds are cut and polished
in Surat, an industrial city in western India. The cutting and polishing
of these diamonds for the global market have helped create close
to 500,000 jobs in the city, according to a recent Times of India
report.
That is nearly half as many jobs as India's entire
information technology industry. Bangalore, the symbol of India's
knowledge economy, may be a global buzzword, but the fate of India's
rural poor depends more on industrial cities like Surat.
Many say the first diamond was discovered 4,000
years ago in the shining sands of an Indian riverbed in the Golconda
region (modern-day Hyderabad). Adventurers made similar discoveries
in South Africa's dusty veldt in the 19th century.
Savvy marketing then turned diamonds a crucial symbol of middle-class
courtship, a "girl’s best friend" and symbol of
eternal love.
India’s ties with the gemstone have continued down through
the ages.
Today, India dominates the polishing business, although the country
produces no raw diamonds of its own.
It is the highly skilled yet cheap workforce that has made India
one of the major players in the industry, contributing to the country's
rapid economic growth.
India spends $10 per carat on the polishing and cutting of diamonds,
against China's $17 and South Africa's $40 to $60. India wants to
cash in on this competitive edge to maintain its position as the
However, most of these diamonds currently pass through diamond-selling
centers in Israel, Belgium and elsewhere before ultimately reaching
India.
The Indian government has been trying to ensure a continuous flow
of rough diamonds through companies like De Beers and Rio Tinto
Group.
Even though there are many companies that are clients of De Beers,
Indian diamond merchants cannot procure the best stones directly
from rough-producing nations or even big companies like Alrosa of
Russia.
Many Indian exporters are hoping to change that by actively pursuing
their objective of direct procurement of rough diamonds from mining
companies in Russia, Canada, Angola and Ghana. This will not only
cut costs, but will help India become a diamond trading hub instead
of just a manufacturing hub.
Some Indian traders fear they will be left with small stones while
the bigger, better stones will be polished in the producing countries
of Africa, or as is the case now, in Antwerp, Belgium, and New York.
At the same time, diamond-producing nations are no longer content
with just mining the rough diamonds. They want to cut and polish
them, too. African cutters may now cut into India’s profits.
The Indian diamond trade, dominated by the close-knit Palanpuri
Jain community, is now eyeing bigger, pricier stones. Surat companies
are now setting up branches in New York and Tel Aviv, Israel, and
learning from cutters in Belgium and Israel. Indian diamond merchants
are also trying to secure a foothold in the lucrative Chinese market,
where the burgeoning middle class is developing a taste for diamonds.
Indian merchants are setting up workshops in China to gain a foothold
in the market.
Apart from India, cutting and polishing of diamonds take place in
South Africa, Belgium, China, Israel, Russia and the United States.
Cutting a rough diamond takes great skill. It is an integral step
in the four Cs used to measure a diamond's worth. Clarity refers
to the clearness or purity of a diamond. It is determined by the
number, size, nature and location of internal and external imperfections.
The Gemological Institute of America determines the clarity scheme.
Color can range from colorless to yellow, with
slight tints of yellow, gray or brown. Fancy colors are rare, making
the stone more valuable. The GIA-certified set of master stones
and/or a computer that accurately grades the color of a polished
diamond determines the color.
Cut refers to the proportions, finish, symmetry
and polish. These factors determine the fire and brilliance. Well-cut
diamonds sell at a premium; poorly cut diamonds sell at discount.
The cut of the diamond can be determined by use of the Dia-Mension
system, a computerized method that takes accurate measurements.
Carat is the unit of weight. A carat is further
subdivided in 100 points (0.01 carat = l point). One carat is equal
to 0.20 grams. The value per carat increases with size because larger
rough diamonds occur less frequently. In other words, two half-carat
diamonds taken together will not cost as much as one one-carat diamond,
as the one-carat stone is rarer.
Source : The Diamond Source
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