You are cordially invited to join us at Hong Kong In Asia World Expo Fair 2024:
As it does at all three of the major Hong Kong shows, MID House of Diamonds will mount a massive display of merchandise at the In Asia World Expo 2024 featuring a large collection of white and fancy-colored loose diamonds, including blue, pink, green and yellow, in all shapes and sizes from 0.30 carats to plus-10.00 carats.
All eight of the company’s international sales offices will be sending much of their top-quality material to the show, among them a selection of rare GIA certified loose diamonds. Also on exhibition will be a collection of unique, high-end diamond jewelry, including rings, necklaces, bracelets and earrings, featuring white and fancy-colored diamonds.
MID House of Diamond booth will be located at the AsiaWorld Export, Booth 7P14, September 2024. It already is possible to set up an appointment with MID at the show by contacting the company’s Hong Kong office, led by Rafael Kish and Ehud Gavrielov, at tel: +852-2-545-7118 or email: [email protected].
Please call +852-2-545-7118 or send us an email at [email protected] to schedule an appointment or to request a copy of our latest custom design catalog.3in4
MID House of Diamonds will be among the exhibitors at the June 2020 JCK Vegas Show. Come say Hi!
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Home » Diamonds blog » DIAMONDS FOR DEVELOPMENT: PROVIDING SOCIAL SIGNIFICANCE TO A LUXURY PURCHASE
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This readiness to demand that a product have both social and material value is a particularly true when it comes to younger consumers, and especially for Millennials and members of Generation Z, who today make up the bulk of diamond jewelry demand. Forbes magazine has reported that 76 percent of young people say they have purchased or would consider purchasing a brand or product to show support for the issues the brand supported, and 67 percent said that they would stop purchasing or consider doing so if the company or brand associated with the product behaved in a way that didn’t align with their values.
Gaborone, the capital of Botswana.
BOTSWANA’S DIAMOND DEVELOPMENT MODEL
In 1966, the British Protectorate of Bechanaland obtained full independence, becoming the Republic of Botswana. At the time, the Southern African nation, which has land mass larger than that of Spain, had only 12 kilometers of paved roads.
In terms of educational potential, the situation was not much better. The first state secondary school had only been built in 1965, the year before independence, and in the entire country, there were an estimated 40 university graduates and about 100 secondary school graduates. Health wise, there was only one doctor for every 47,652 people.
But, serendipitously, the same year that Botswana became independent, a De Beers prospecting team discovered the first kimberlite pipe in the Mochudi area. One year later, massive diamond deposits were discovered at Orapa, which would be developed into a major mine, and that would be followed by Letlhakane and then Jwaneng, the world’s richest diamond mine by value to this day.
The influx of capital for the diamond mining sector that resulted was a catalyst for the development of other sectors of the Botswana economy. From 1966 to 2014, GDP per capita increased at an average of 5.9 percent per annum, one of the highest rates in the world over that period.
The revenues generated from the diamond trade also help build the country’s infrastructure. By 2011 there were more than more than 6,000 kilometers of paved roads. Access to schooling improved steadily, with the country producing 10,668 tertiary and 8,268 secondary school graduates in 2013. The ratio of doctor out of the general population was cut to one for every 3,300 people.
A PRIMARY RESOURCE IN MULTIPLE COUNTRIES
Botswana is today considered a middle-income country – a rarity in sub-Saharan Africa. Its diamond industry generates about 30 percent of GDP and more than 75 percent of its foreign exchange earnings.
Neighboring Namibia is also heavily reliant on the extraction and processing of minerals for export. There mining accounts for 11.5 percent of the country’s GDP and more than 50 percent of foreign exchange earnings.
Source: www.diamondfacts.org
Diamond mining also plays a critical role in the economies of Angola, Sierra Leone, the Democratic Republic of Congo, the Russian autonomous zone of Yakutia, and to a lesser degree in Zimbabwe and South Africa.
It does not make much a dent in the GDP of a developed nation like Canada, which today is the world’s third largest producing country after Russia and Botswana. But it certainly does in the country’s Northwest Territories, the icy and largely undeveloped region where most of the mines are located, and where diamonds account for about 20 percent of the area’s economy.
TRANSITIONING FROM A DIAMOND ECONOMY
The countries or regions that in one way or another are reliant on their diamond sectors together house populations approaching 1.5 billion people, which ias about 20 percent of the world’s total.
Dependent as some of them are on the contribution made by the diamond business, the threat of that sector being damaged in any way is also acute. Modeling by the Botswana Institute for Development Policy Analysis estimated that gross domestic product per capita in the country could drop as much as 48 percent once the mines are exhausted.
In Botswana, as is the case in a number of countries, the pressure is on to use their diamond resources as a means of creating alternative and more sustainable sources of economic opportunity.
This is a slow process, and, as even a developed nation like Australia demonstrates, countries that are economically dependent upon natural resources, find it exceedingly difficult to shift to other means of income revenue.
But that in no way detracts from the very significant role being played by diamonds and the diamond sectors in the long-term economic health of developing nations. The benefits in terms of infrastructure development and investments in public health and education have been and will continue to be invaluable.