Indian Gold Jewellery Industry


Book Description

India has a long-standing cultural and societal affinity with gold and gold jewellery. Gold metaphorically represents the sacredness, purity and immortality that bind religious beliefs and culture together. Accumulation of gold is associated with material and non-material cultures where the perceptions, attitudes and experiences of the members engaged in production and consumption are bound into a complex relationship. The idea of the book initially originated from the course of research work. It was found that India has the largest unorganised jewellery industry, in terms of manufacturing and consumption unit. Jewellery fabrication in India is not just a profession for the jewellers, but it has been a family tradition extending across generations. Gold jewellery makers (sunnar, swarnakars) are the spine of the jewellery industry. They acquired the skill of making jewellery from the experienced and learned gold smithery (karigars), either from their ancestors who were engaged in this business or from the craftsmen-cum-petty traders. The co-relations of castes, religion, culture, economy and class are intertwined with each other in such a way that made the gold jewellery industry sustainable. Surprisingly, there is an absence of literature on understanding the structural and functional aspects of the gold jewellery industry in India. This book explores the roles of sunars/swarnakars (goldsmith or jewellery makers), consumers, trade and the policies that bring a change in the gold jewellery industry in India and India’s position in the global market scenario. By focusing on their way of life, the book brings unique insights into the social and economic experience of the unorganised gold jewellery sector and the role of consumers in production.










The Golden Glow of India


Book Description

Gold is a large Global business and represents the most liquid commodity market other than crude oil. These notes offer an overview of issues relating to Gold market and should be looked at as only information presented after the investigation of the structure of gold, trading as a futures contract on the NCDEX. In Part I, as an introduction to the precious metal Gold and its origin, a brief review of a prominent book on Gold and its history titled “The Ages of Gold” by Timothy Green is presented, Part II emphasizes on the demand and supply of gold in the world market with trend analysis, Part III emphasizes on aspects of the Gold Futures market, exchange trading of Gold futures with an overview of the now familiar GARCH properties (autoregressive conditional heteroscedasticity). Part IV emphasizes on a the Indian gold futures market and illustrates a rarely used measure in the capital markets-the Garman Klass estimator - is used to provide new insights in intraday and interday gold counter dynamics. As part of the closing remarks an executive summary is presented encompassing latest data on gold from a Global perspective. Scope for further research - Trend analysis of the Indian Gold futures market in the backdrop of the more mature American market would result in better forecasting of prices and demand.







Luxury in Global Perspective


Book Description

Machine generated contents note: Luxury and global history Bernd-Stefan Grewe and Karin Hofmeester; 1. Precious things in motion: luxury and the circulation of jewels in Mughal India Kim Siebenhuner; 2. Diamonds as a global luxury commodity Karin Hofmeester; 3. Gold in twentieth-century India - a luxury? Bernd-Stefan Grewe; 4. Chinese porcelain local and global context: the imperial connection Anne Gerritsen; 5. Luxury or commodity? The success of Indian cotton cloth in the first global age Giorgio Riello; 6. The gendered luxury of wax prints in South Ghana: a local luxury good with global roots Silvia Ruschak; 7. From Venice to East Africa: history, uses and meanings of glass beads Karin Pallaver; 8. Imports and autarky: tortoiseshell in early modern Japan Martha Chaiklin; 9. Tickling and klicking the ivories - the metamorphosis of a global commodity in the nineteenth century Jonas Kranzer; 10. The conservation of luxury: safari hunting and the consumption of wildlife in twentieth-century East Africa Bernhard Gissibl; 11. Luxury as a global phenomenon: concluding remarks Bernd-Stefan Grewe and Karin Hofmeester




The Gold Arc


Book Description

The 'The Gold Arc' identifies the gold and jewellery sector in the emerging economy of India among others, to communicate to its readers the business process at work. It discusses the complex regulatory landscape and the manner in which the industry is likely to evolve given the various challenges it is confronted with, which will help all the participants, actors, players and stakeholders, associated directly or indirectly with the jewellery industry globally. The notion, tone and reflections outlined in the book cuts across other sectors in the economy as well. This will assist the prospective foreign investors who have long term vision and interest in emerging India to set their targets understanding the origin and flow of policy changes in the form of GST, AML/CFT, FATF, Hallmarking and digital interventions sweeping the country. It will help the businesses to understand the required skill sets to build a successful company. The book will empower all Entrepreneurs who intend to improve and stay on top of their games. The service providers like banks, insurance, rating agencies, accountants and vendors will find the book extremely useful in understanding not only the working of the gems and jewellery sector but also of other sectors in reference to the policy flow and the challenges in Indian context. The book discusses the real challenges emanating from within and across borders that the small business owners can use to take their marketing game to the next level in the era of digitalization and online applications. The book simplifies and aims to improve the understanding of the business players so that they can focus on running the business. About the book 'The Gold Arc', it is a compilation of current selected themes that speak about physical gold and the jewellery industry in India. It struggles to connect some of the new regulatory and structural developments in the realm of financial matters in India that with digital technological interventions seem to be a distinct advantage in the future. The book explores the centrality of gold in the world monetary system, how the price of gold is decided, who fixes its price and what has prompted introduction of paper gold in India. Indians consider gold as a form of money, and jewellery a store of value that preserves wealth in difficult times. The book explores India's love for gold and jewellery, home to an exalted age old heritage that takes pride in her rich craftsmanship, and how the appetite for gold and jewellery remain sustained over the years despite of restrictive gold import policies. The book has three chapters. The first chapter on Philosophy of Gold and Jewellery investigates gold's role and function in world finance, India's love for gold embedded in tradition and culture, international price mechanism, export policy that influence India's growth and employment . It examines how Indians are constrained to adjust to their jewellery legacy and magnificence and seek for answers. The second chapter on Jewellery Matrix covers marketing strategies, future of manufacturing, available incentives to Micro Small Medium Enterprises, Lean manufacturing techniques, unique wage model, jewellery hallmarking, distribution channels, regulations like Beneficial ownership, legal person, AML/CFT, FATF, origin of GST and guidelines that impacts Indian jewellers . It is written in the form of individual essays that can stand on its own. The Third chapter scans for challenges in the Jewellery Industry from within, doing business in India digitally, the requirement of the jewellers to accommodate in the era of digitalization and role of rating agencies. It also looks at the coming opportunities in emerging markets and visualizes the future decade for the jewellery industry, which is poised to grow and alter the economics of emerging markets. The book studies the changes that are in progress both in consumer behavior and within the business.