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Thuggo
11-19-2003, 06:43 PM
In IKEA We Trust, Swedes Tell Pollsters
Wed Nov 19, 9:38 AM ET Add Oddly Enough - Reuters to My Yahoo!


By Stephen Brown

STOCKHOLM (Reuters) - Swedes trust IKEA, purveyor of affordable assemble-yourself furniture and Swedish meatballs in 22 countries, more than their own government, politicians, media or trade unions, according to a new poll published Wednesday.

The only institutions they respect more than the creators of the Billy bookcase are schools and universities. Even the maker of the ultimate safe family car, Volvo -- the car business now belongs to Ford -- ranks lower than privately owned IKEA.

IKEA furniture is ubiquitous in Swedish homes and those who miss home-cooking when they are abroad pop into its restaurants to load up on herring and meatballs with lingonberry sauce.

The survey commissioned by MedieAkademin, an independent media forum backed by Gothenburg University and local media, was carried out by pollsters NFO Infratest on 740 people in October.

Asked how much they trusted a list of institutions, 66 percent said they trusted IKEA a lot or quite a lot, compared with just 47 percent expressing the same level of confidence in their parliament and only 18 percent in political parties.

The European Commission (news - web sites), the EU executive which got a taste of Sweden's euro-skepticism this year when it rejected the EU single currency in a referendum, ranked bottom with 14 percent.

Universities and highs schools topped the ranking at 84 percent, public service radio ranked equal third with Volvo. The flagship Swedish company Ericsson (news - web sites) ranked low at 26 percent. The telecoms firm is laying off thousands of workers in a savings drive, but recently returned to profit after years in the red.

Privately-owned IKEA has stores from Shanghai to San Francisco and a Swedish public relations consultancy -- not commissioned by IKEA, but by local business daily Dagens Industri -- issued a "world economy index" this week based on prices of its goods around the world.

It ranked IKEA prices in 15 of the 22 countries that host its 154 stores, visited by 286 million people last year.

Similar to existing indexes of McDonalds' Big Mac burger or the Mars Bar, it found that exchange rates and consumer tax levels made IKEA cheapest in the United States and dearest in Finland -- a neighbor of Sweden and major timber producer.

Nordic neighbors Denmark and Norway were also "expensive in IKEA terms" according to the survey, as were Spain and Belgium.

"Sweden ranks fourth cheapest, the cheapest overall is the United States, followed by the Netherlands, Germany then fourth Britain and Sweden," said Jonas Eriksson of PR firm Hallvarsson & Halvarsson, which intends to publish the index yearly.

Oddly enough this article says nothing about frilly shirts and homoerotic photography. I guess Stitz is alone in liking both of those.

Eomer
11-19-2003, 07:05 PM
Ikea is pretty big in Edmonton, there has been a store on the south side for at least 10 years. They recently closed that one and moved into a ridiculously large one (we briefly looked at the plans and were considering bidding it during construction, but decided that it wasn't worthwhile since every jackass within 1000km was bidding as well). I just moved into a new place, and since it's my first place I needed a bunch of shit (bedroom and living room stuff etc). I have bought stuff from Ikea in the past, and thought it was okay (although the book shelves I have from there are crappy, the stupid shelves warp over time if you put, get this, books on them). They are pretty cheap too. But I didn't find a GD thing there, they seem to have a problem with Maple finished furniture or something (all my cabinets and the little furniture I have are maple).

It was an interesting trip, though. The place was absolutely jam packed, quite an accomplishment for such a big building. I have never seen so many yuppies in one place, I was worried it would collapse into a singularity of Volkswagens and Moby music.

It really is a good store though. Ask anyone here where to get furniture, and they will instantly say Ikea. I ended up buying a whack of shit at Mobler (http://www.moblerfurniture.com/), which is kind of the same thing but on a way the hell smaller scale. The stuff is a bit nicer and pricier as well. However, they had Maple coming out of their asses there. I guess Danish people like Maple?