Clinton's Cocoa Paradise range in attractive nature-inspired packaging offers customers globally-sourced chocolates in a variety of flavours to suit different tastes. |
Such joy that chocolates can bring to us (me included) that the global chocolate market has become huge today, to the tune of more than US$98 billion a year, according to MarketsandMarkets (M&M),a global market research and consulting company based in the U.S. Growth of the chocolate industry over the last decade has been driven in large part by an increasing awareness of the health benefits of certain types of chocolate and growing popularity in Asian Pacific countries, according to experts.
The new venture marks Clintons’ commitment to expanding their confectionery range, as the company aims to capitalise on the thriving chocolate industry, which is expected to continue growing at an annual rate close to 5% until 2020.
The 100g bars are made from cocoa beans sourced from farms around the world including Madagascar, Venezuela, Peru and Ecuador and slowly roasted to release their natural flavours. The Madagascan dark chocolate which is made from 70% cocoa beans went on to win an award at the International Chocolate Awards in 2016.
Indeed, understanding happiness is a profound matter, and together with well-being, happiness of the world's population has increasingly seen as important factors for global governments when it comes to developing policies.According to the 2017 World Happiness Report - launched earlier this year, those countries that have thrived economically and socially have registered the highest level of happiness in the world ranking.
The six indicators for measuring happiness are Freedom, Generosity, Health, Social Support, Income and Trust Worthy Governance.These indicators show that we should not just judge the success of a country by figures based on GDP growth but by the quality of growth, a view that was emphasised by the head of the UN Development Program (UNDP) in a recent speech arguing that more attention should be paid to happiness in the world's governments' efforts to achieve both human and sustainable development.
This report gives special attention to the social foundations of happiness for individuals and
nations. The chapter starts with global and regional charts showing the distribution of
answers, from roughly 3000 respondents in each of more than 150 countries, to a question
asking them to evaluate their current lives on a ladder where 0 represents the worst possible life and 10 the best possible.
Although the top ten countries remain the same as last year, there has been some shuffling of
places. Most notably, Norway has jumped into first position, followed closely by Denmark,
Iceland and Switzerland.
This was the fifth such report published since the first World Happiness Report of April, 2012, published in support of the UN High Level Meeting on happiness and well-being. Happiness is increasingly considered the proper measure of social progress and the goal of public policy.
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