I have never been much for jewelry. You take the trinkets; I’ll take Manhattan Island. Yes, I once had a cherished high school ring
– 14 karat gold with a garnet in the middle – that set me back $39. But it slipped off in the surf of southern
Spain a few years later and no manner of diving around for it, goggleless,
could turn it up. That was it for me in
the jewelry department for nearly thirty years until Charles and I exchanged
platinum bands, only a fairly minor extravagance. (It was the built-in bookshelves that made me gulp.)
The point is, diamonds may be beautiful, but diamonds are also a
lot more expensive than they would be if DeBeers hadn’t organized the world
diamond cartel so efficiently, and hadn’t persuaded starry-eyed young men that,
to be men, they had to devote two months’ pre-tax pay to the purchase of
an engagement ring.
I say: click here
for the engagement ring and be dazzled by the possibilities.
Not that I have ever dealt with these people myself. But their full-page ad in the New York
Times and their web site lead me to believe you could do worse than to risk
your $119 on a two-karat diamond engagement ring that (the ad says) would
otherwise cost $22,000.
I never thought I would actually write the words “cubic zirconia,”
and have deleted both QVC and the Home Shopping Network from my cable line-up. And, okay, yes, these are fake diamonds. But about the only way for a layman to tell
they are fake is to scratch them with real diamonds. And what kind of people go around at parties doing that? Especially since their real diamonds
are locked away in a safe deposit box, and they are wearing fake ones, too.
Do you remember Moh’s Hardness Scale? I do! I do! It runs from 1 to 10, with TALC being
softest, at 1, then GYPSUM, CALCITE, FLUORITE, SOMETHING, FELDSPAR, QUARTZ,
BERYL, RUBY, DIAMOND. Ta-da! (Ah,
those endless, lonely childhood hours.) Diamond is 10. But quartz, at 7, is pretty darn hard, as
you surely know, so if these $119 suckers are 9, and can scratch quartz,
for crying out loud . . . can scratch beryl . . . can hold their own
against rubies!!! – well, surely such a ring, along with $3,000 matching
his-and-her Roth IRAs, is the wiser way to demonstrate your love and
commitment.
On your fiftieth anniversary, she’ll still have the dazzling
ring. But you’ll also have – just by
accepting a 9-hardness stone instead of a 10 – an extra $110,000, after-tax, in
today’s buying power to help make your golden years joyous. (This assumes a return 6% above inflation,
and from just one investment of $3,000 apiece in the matching his-and-her Roth IRAs. Manage to contribute $3,000 apiece every
year at that rate, and on your fiftieth anniversary you will have, between the
two of you, better than $1.8 million. If one or both of you don't qualify to contribute to a Roth IRA, you could still do well with an index fund.)
Just the $119 ring – let alone trying to pass it off as a real
diamond – won’t cut it, obviously. You’ve
got to come up with the ring and the $3,000 Roth IRAs – and maybe a necklace
and a joint mutual fund account – to show that you really are crazy in love. Just not crazy in love with DeBeers.