• @[email protected]
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      477 months ago

      Not to completely spring to IKEAs defense here, but I heard they really were affected by production and shipping problems during covid. It’s reasonable prices would go up, and at least good that they are going down again.

      • bean
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        257 months ago

        Yes at least they bring them back down. Most companies just said fuck it, let’s keep the price jacked! Greedy Capitalism at its second worst. First worst is how they destroy the environment.

      • FenrirIII
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        217 months ago

        Lumber was especially affected during covid. Prices soared and demand was peak.

        • @[email protected]
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          87 months ago

          If 99% of the “wood” they used was lumber and not laminated compressed sawdust and cardboard, that would make sense

          • idunnololz
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            27 months ago

            Actually IKEA does sell a lot of solid wood products.

    • yeehaw
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      67 months ago

      It’s a trick. It has to be. Some way, some how…

      • @fapforce5
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        27 months ago

        The trick is to draw people from buying furniture from the big box store to their store and still more to the growing population that is now price conscious.

  • ChihuahuaOfDoom
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    7 months ago

    Thank you Ingemar. Edit: if you remember the Ingemar from Ikea ads, you may be old.

    • BigFig
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      167 months ago

      Dudes dead, it’s a holding company now

      • no banana
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        147 months ago

        Still a better company for consumers than most.

        I’m saying consumers because it certainly isn’t great for the forests.

        • BigFig
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          67 months ago

          For sure, though my family members that have worked for them for a long time say the company is changing in some pretty shitty ways internally

          • no banana
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            7 months ago

            Yeah, I don’t know much about the inside of the company. I’ve got some friends who’ve worked there and had a positive experience, but I’m in Sweden and I’ve no idea how things are internationally.

            Edit: clarified what the thing was.

            • @3ntranced
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              37 months ago

              I still have a blast walking around and the build quality from most collections has been up to par if not improved on past pieces.

              • no banana
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                27 months ago

                Definitely. The end product is getting better and better, and they’re easier to build too.

                • @[email protected]
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                  17 months ago

                  Show me it surviving a moving truck ONCE and I’m sold. So VERY little Ikea gear can make it. Hemnes, Brimnes, Early Billy, Efectiv, etc.

                  Pine grows fast in managed forests. It’s actually renewable. Bring back Pine if we can’t have anything better.

        • @Thrillhouse
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          -17 months ago

          And they don’t pay taxes, apparently. So yeah we’re getting cheap furniture but I do wonder if the net benefit to society would be better if they paid tax.

          • @[email protected]
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            7 months ago

            Which type of taxes? Income? Property? Payroll? Something else?

            If I remember correctly, all their designs are owned by a non-profit charity (that they own), and the for-profit business pays royalties to the charity. Charities aren’t taxed as much as businesses, if at all.

            Similarly, parts of Ikea that are in countries with high tax rates funnel their revenue to subsidiaries thay are in countries with low tax rates, as royalty payments, business expenses, etc. to shift the tax burden to the favorable country.

            • @Thrillhouse
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              7 months ago

              Here.

              I should mention this link is from a tax firm almost glorifying the way that ikea has structured themselves. It’s a very charitable reading of the situation.

              Just google IKEA tax, there’s tons of sources on their alleged tax evasion, including it seems claims by the EU that the Netherlands facilitates it.

              I see this as corporate greed pure and simple. There is no reason people should be starving and unhoused while IKEA dodges taxes.

              • @[email protected]
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                7 months ago

                I see - this is kinda what I was thinking too. I remember reading about it a while back.

                from a tax firm almost glorifying the way that ikea has structured themselves. It’s a very charitable reading of the situation.

                The thing is that it’s likely that everything Ikea is doing is legal, so tax firms would be taking notes (after all, their goal is to ensure their customers pay as little tax as is legally allowed)

              • Digitalprimate
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                27 months ago

                Pretty much everyone here in NL who is aware that would agree with you.

      • @Raiderkev
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        37 months ago

        The way they set IKEA up as a tax shelter so his kids wouldn’t have to pay and inheritance tax is super cool… Good Job Ingvaar

    • @Botzo
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      77 months ago

      You don’t have to be rich, just smart.

  • @TokenBoomer
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    147 months ago

    Instructions unclear: Now the table is a chair.

  • @[email protected]
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    127 months ago

    Let me know when they bring back wood. Not even real wood - I’d do beaver chow - but enough of this cheap-ass disposable paper-and-air single-use crap that can’t survive a house move for the same price as its former wood self.

    • @Evotech
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      77 months ago

      Ikea has plenty of “premium” alternatives