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Tracing the bloodstones
NO GLITZY romance in the West is complete without the gift of a
costly diamond necklace. Even for ordinary mortals, a diamond
ring, however small in value, is a must to solemnise a wedding.
Over the decades De Beers had successfully promoted the image
that "a diamond is forever". Unfortunately, even good things must
come to an end.
Of late, there has been an unusual interest in the working of the
diamond industry. While major newspapers carry special articles,
there is a web site, www.diamonds.net/conflicts voicing the views
of the industry. The United Nations has a site in its Global
Policy Forum providing a wealth of material on the subject which
include U.N Resolutions, NGO debates and other literature.
However, what is most disturbing from reports is the alarming
nexus between export of diamonds and financing of arms by rebels,
which has stirred the collective conscience. The term "conflict
diamonds" is really a transferred epithet and refers to diamonds
from conflict areas. Global Witness (G.W.), a London based NGO,
has brought out several reports on Angola. Its report of December
1998 A Rough Trade documented the volume of exports globally and
the role of De Beers in contravention of U.N. sanctions.
An informal Group in Ottawa called the Sierra Leone Working Group
produced a report titled The Heart of the Matter: Sierra Leone,
Diamonds & Human Security. It highlights ``how diamonds - small
pieces of carbon with no intrinsic value - have been the cause of
widespread death, destruction and misery for almost a decade in
the small West African country of Sierra Leone." Mr. Robert
Fowler, Canadian Ambassador to the UN, submitted a report to the
Security Council "naming and shaming" arms traffickers, diamond
dealers and politicians who were prepared to breach UN sanctions
and help UNITA, the Angolan rebels.
The issue came up in the World Diamond Congress (WDC) held in
Moscow in July 1999, which called upon its members ``not to trade
in conflict diamonds." The unstated mindset in the industry was
that it could not do much as the problem, in its view, was that
``conflict diamonds are indistinguishable from non-conflict
diamonds and there was no way the trade could be checked."
The situation deteriorated further with the escalation of
rebellion in Sierra Leone and UN intervention. G.W. brought out
another report in June 2000 Conflict diamonds: The possibilities
for the identification, certification and control of diamonds in
which it urged the industry to ``commit to the establishment of a
chain of warranties 'from mine to finger'. The diamond industry,
however, was in no mood to change the posture taken in Moscow
that it was helpless. At the same time, the resolution passed by
the WDC was an attempt to shift the responsibility entirely on to
governments of exporting/importing countries, confining the
industry's role to co-operation and adoption of ``an ethical code
of conduct" which breached would lead to expulsion from WFDB,
IDMA and all other relevant organisations. Curiously though,
membership of WFDB or IDMA is not compulsory for those in diamond
trade!
Manipulative market dynamics
What marks the diamond industry from all other industries is that
the rules of the "free market" do not apply. In reality, there
was (and still is) only one producer who built an empire by
accessing political power during the British colonial era or
through clever corporate and clandestine maneuvers at other
times. The cost of production of roughs bears no relation to the
value of the final product. The cost varies from mine to mine;
the value from stone to stone. The value of the stone at the
retail end (Tiffany's) is unknown and subject to prevailing rates
of economic growth, income distribution, changes in fashions,
tastes and cultural mores. There are myths about specific
diamonds and new myths may be created to enhance the value.
So far, De Beers has undertaken generic publicity for the
industry as whole and retailers have not taken part in it. The
outlay on publicity was $170 million in 1999. Scarcity is a
factor that generally creates value. Manipulation of scarcity can
create scarcity. But, supply manipulation has to be discreet.
While oversupply will kill value, under-supply may create tension
among dealers. The system built by De Beers tried to resolve all
these and evolved a method, which bound the producer and dealers
neatly. This is the system of selling "sights" to "sight
holders".
The `sights' system
The system of "sights" and "sight-holders" was an ingenious
device that took care of the problems. There are at present 125
sight holders. It is a closed shop union to which entry is highly
restricted. Sights are packets of diamonds (shoeboxes as they are
called) containing an assortment of roughs of varying sizes and
qualities. De Beers fixes the value of the sights on certain
global parameters. Perhaps averages the cost of operations
globally. Operating profits in Botswana are said to be 90 per
cent and 50 per cent for the older mines in South Africa.
The assortment of the sight is done by its London subsidiary, the
Diamond Trading Corporation. No sight holder may question either
the value attached to the sights or the assortment in the sights.
Those who attempt to do so are liable for exclusion as sight
holders and there is no right of appeal to any agency inside or
outside. There is no other "club" they can join. De Beers has
made it clear that, except for a small part of the roughs which
may be allocated to specific markets (India, for instance for
smaller, inferior roughs), there can be no re-trading of roughs.
There are no written rules, there is no transparency and the
operations are shrouded in secrecy.
All the members are expected to function on the basis of trust
and loyalty. This cozy relationship prevents entry of new
parties. In fairness to De Beers one may add that, considering
the special features of the industry, it had evolved a structure
that had endured for a long time and served its interests very
well. But now it has begun to hurt when the other limb of the
edifice is getting arthritic.
Supply-side problems
Central to the operations of De Beers is the decision taken in
the early Thirties to be the custodian of the market and its
readiness to be ``the seller of last resort" - to buy and
stockpile any rough offered. The astute strategy served the
company well for over 60 years. The rationale was simple. While
De Beers was in charge of the bulk of global production, a
marginal producer could upset the apple cart. So, buy up the
roughs and store them in vaults at London. The stockpile may be
offloaded over a period to ensure long-term stability of
operations by balancing changes in demand.
This policy, pursued relentlessly, led the company to engage in
questionable activities when "outside" sources became critical in
the sixties and later. For instance, when African countries
became independent and U.N. sanctions were imposed against South
Africa, De Beers was able to source and market all the diamonds
from South Africa and other African countries through various
legal entities incorporated in third countries in circumvention
of sanctions. Apart from its African operations, the company
handled the Russian diamonds for 40 years and the relationship
with Russia, on the company's own admission, ``was mutually
beneficial". Russia could get industrial diamonds to increase its
oil production. Crude oil and diamonds had become the main
sources of foreign exchange for the former USSR.
As later developments would predicate, it is the "outside
purchase" which is at the heart of conflict diamonds. In 1999,
the world production of diamonds was estimated at $6.8 billion.
Of this, $3.8 billion came from South Africa, Namibia, Botswana,
Canada and Australia; $600 million from Angola; and about $800
million from a wide range of countries including the Democratic
Republic of Congo. In its testimony to the U.S. Congress, De
Beers confirmed that its own production together with purchases
under contract with Russia and Canada amounted to 65 per cent of
world production. It also admitted that it maintained an "outside
purchase" office largely in Africa till October 1999 and over the
last decade the purchases amounted to less than 5 per cent of the
company's intake.
Some analysts and NGOs question these data and feel that the
value of diamonds sourced from rebel areas could be around 20
percent. In any case, it is a small part of their global
operations and it was in October 1999 that De Beers decided to
vacate this turf. It was not because it was overly concerned
about "rebels", "conflicts" or other humane considerations. After
all it had dealt with them all since the Sixties and built the
pile in London. But it was the stock market or the shareholders
who warned that the stockpile was a burden and they were not
getting their full return. The stockpile was estimated at $5
billion and was a dead hang. The share value (net asset value)
was assessed at 79 per cent below the list price. This was
disturbing. There were other factors at work.
The Eighties as a whole was good business with the booming Asian
economies, strong yen and demand exceeding supply with the
enforcement of single channel marketing (``sights" and ``sight
holders" under De Beers). Diamond prices as also the value of
inventory went up. In the Nineties demand collapsed with the
Asian economic crises and the weakened yen. Supply exceeded
demand and De Beers had to lose its Angolan concessions and
Argyle. New entrants such as BHP of Australia, Le Leviev of
Russia entered the market. One market, which is vital for
boosting demand, is the US. Unfortunately De Beers have anti-
trust litigation dating back to the Eighties with the U.S.
Justice Department, hampering its entry to the U.S. The Carat Act
had been introduced by Tony Hall in the Congress and this would
have barred De Beers from the U.S. market. These perceptions
discounted its stock quotations further.
The company decided to give up stock piling policies and one
direct consequence of this was its decision to close down its
purchase offices in Africa. From now on it would use the
"conflict diamond" stick to beat the competitors with. On the
July 12, the company Chairman declared that under its new policy
``any diamond manufacturer found to have purchased stones that
fuel wars in Africa will no longer be able to buy from De Beers."
Since March it had started issuing a guarantee that its diamonds
are not from a conflict areas. Sight holders are required to
demand similar guarantees. UN sanctions on Angola and on Sierra
Leone are on diamonds which are not certified by governments
through established procedures. But, De Beers have excluded all
"conflict diamonds" smuggled out of Africa. In short, it is
creating an image that it is doing more than expected of it under
UN sanctions.
There is no outside agency of the government or non-government
that supervises or controls the operations of De Beers. The
system of guarantees by De Beers though commercially valuable to
its own clients will not have credibility. We have noted how the
De Beers' sights operate. If this analysis is correct, how do we
treat the diamonds currently in the stockpile? How much of it are
"conflict" and "non-conflict" and who decides? By this device De
Beers is trying to safeguard the future value of the stockpile
and also to sanitise it. It is, at the same time, trying to
create a divide between "clean diamonds" from De Beers and
"conflict diamonds" from others. With its present position in the
market and the diamond network, it may even succeed for a while.
But is it a solution to the festering issue?
The solution can only come from a system of regulation and
certification for the industry. Along with it, there is need for
banning the arms trade and regulating the banking system to
prevent money laundering. There are too many codes under
negotiations and too many proposals afloat. It is unlikely that
there will be consensus on these as between developed and
developing countries. As far diamond industry is concerned, it is
clear that it is not ready or keen to put one in place.
A unique feature of diamonds is that it is not easy to identify
their origin. As explained to the US Congress in a written
testimony by De Beers, "It is possible for a diamond expert to
source a complete parcel of rough diamonds as having come from a
particular area or region using a number of different clues. In
short, there is not much you can do about it. This is the
reasoning which the WDC given in its resolution. At the same
breadth, it has suggested that each country enact "redline"
legislation so that no parcel of rough may be imported unless
such a parcel of roughs has been sealed and registered in a
universally standardised manner by an accredited export authority
from the exporting country.
These are abstract ideas and have been thrown into the ring more
for continuing the debate than for solving it. Given the special
features of the commodity and the existing structure of the
industry and the manner of its operations how can governments
classify roughs and put them in parcels on their own? If this
results in unbundling the "sights" into classified and
standardised packets will De Beers cooperate? Will its DTC
operations have any rationale? These are imponderables.
The diamond industry, under the baton of De Beers, is making the
right noises to neutralise the attacks made by humanitarian NGOs.
Lost in all this battle are the claims of diamond rich countries
to access valuable resources for their own development. Some
economist said that it is a curse to have too much of natural
resources. They alone are not to be blamed.
K. Subramanian
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