Page 245 - Truncal States to UAE_Neat
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Chapter Six

                 chief reason for the slackness of the market was the lack of interest of
                 Europeans, who were mainly French buyers. They usually spent
                 about one million pounds sterling per season, but in 1930 they spent
                 only a few thousand pounds sterling in Bahrain.51
                   Hindu merchants were reported to be speculating in 1932 that
                 pearls had reached their lowest price, and they accepted pearls again
                 as security.52 But the trade remained depressed and in Bahrain pearls
                 fell behind gold, rice and cotton goods in order of importance as the
                 principal export or re-export commodity in the year 1933-4. In a
                 report to the Department of Overseas Trade in London by the
                Residency in Bushire dated October 1934 it was stated that “for a
                 number of reasons this industry has fallen into a state of extreme
                depression during recent years and no signs of improvement are as
                yet visible. In the first place, economic conditions in Europe and
                America have led to a decrease in the demand for pearls with a result
                that continental buyers no longer find it worth their while to visit
                Bahrain every season as they did in former years. Secondly the
                introduction of Japanese cultured pearls has had an adverse effect on
                the market for natural pearls, and, thirdly, the quality of the local
                catch has deteriorated due perhaps to the fact that the pearling beds
                have been overworked.”53
                  This situation did not improve in the remaining years before the
                beginning of the Second World War and became, of course, even
                worse during the war. Using as a standard the selling season of
                winter 1928/9, which was the last one in which prices continued to
                rise over those of previous years, prices of pearls fell in 1943 to about
                10 per cent of that value, and a 10-grain pearl which cost a dealer
                about 4,000 M.T. Dollars in 1924 dropped to 400 M.T. Dollars after
                19 29.54 An added problem was that from 1944 onwards it became
                particularly difficult to obtain the large quantities of rice which were
                required as provisions for the pearling crews. It was therefore
                expected at the beginning of the 1944 season that the diving would be
                on a much-reduced scale and within a smaller radius than usual
                because the boats had to return frequently to pick up supplies.55
                  Another threat to the pearling industry during the war years did
                not, however, materialise. In order to avoid spending sterling on
                purchases which were deemed inessential, the Government of India
                was  asked by the Treasury in London to prohibit the purchase of
                precious stones from any country outside the sterling area. During
                the summer of 1943 some departments of the Government of India

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