He is one of the world's wealthiest men with a fortune estimated at US$23 billion ($30 billion), yet he drives a 15-year-old car, flies economy class and encourages the thousands of staff in his global empire to use both sides of company notepaper when writing letters.
Ingvar Kamprad, the 84-year-old founder of Ikea, has a legendary reputation for thriftiness, despite being the 11th-richest person on the planet. But Swedes have been shocked by recent revelations which suggest that Kamprad may have taken his parsimony a step too far. It is alleged that he has been secretly running his empire via a Liechtenstein foundation to help Ikea avoid millions in tax. It is perfectly legal.
Kamprad, who now lives in Switzerland, has insisted that he and his family no longer have any control over Ikea. But a television documentary by Sweden's SVT channel alleges he "secured control and power over Ikea and ... created a foundation in one of the world's tax havens - Liechtenstein".
SVT claims in its two-part programme that there are two faces to Ikea - one public and the other.
It maintains that Inka Holdings, the company that runs Ikea's 280 stores around the world, is the corporation's public face. The other, it claims, is a Liechtenstein-based holding called the Intergo Foundation, which was set up 20 years ago.
The documentary claims that Intergo and its Luxembourg-based subsidiary, Inter Ikea Systems, own the royalty rights to every single product the furniture giant sells.
"Inter Ikea is the real Ikea," the SVT programme insisted. It alleged that 3 per cent of all Ikea sales were siphoned off to the Liechtenstein foundation in royalties which had allowed it to amass funds totalling 100 billion Swedish kronor ($20 billion).
Kamprad declined to be interviewed for the documentary. However, just before the programme was aired , he issued a statement admitting that he still had some control over Ikea via the foundation, whose existence had hitherto been unknown.
He insisted that the foundation was run by an independent board.
"Its mission is to invest in expansion and business deals and to secure the long-term survival of Ikea," Kamprad said. He flatly denied allegations that the foundation's aim was to avoid tax and insisted that Ikea paid all required taxes. "However, we have always looked at taxes as a cost, just as any other cost that comes with doing business," he said.
Insisting there was nothing wrong with trying to be tax-efficient, Kamprad concluded in his statement on the Ikea website: "An optimised tax structure gives us the possibility of flexibility in using our assets that have already been taxed in one market. They can be used in new markets for further business development without the additional burden of double taxation."
In Sweden, the allegations have dented the image of one of the country's best-known companies, which had enjoyed a reputation for scrupulous corporate responsibility. Questions are being asked about why Ikea has resorted to using a notorious tax haven like Liechtenstein.
And it is not the first time that Kamprad has faced embarrassing disclosures about his activities.
In 1994, Swedes were shattered to discover their iconic business entrepreneur had been a member of the country's wartime pro-fascist New Swedish Movement, which raised funds and recruited members until 1945. The allegations emerged after the publication of letters written by the Swedish fascist Per Engdahl, who died that year.
Kamprad remained a friend of Engdahl until the early 1950s. In a letter to Ikea employees in 1994, Kamprad described his membership as "the greatest mistake in my life".
He is thought to have acquired his youthful fascist leanings from his widowed German grandmother, who came from the formerly German-speaking Sudetenland region of what is now the Czech Republic. She regarded the Nazi annexation of Sudetenland as a liberation.
When Kamprad was a boy he started selling matches to neighbours from his bicycle. He subsequently sold fish, Christmas tree decorations, pencils and ballpoint pens. When he was 17 his father gave him some money for passing his exams and he used it to set up Ikea.
The company's name is made up of the initials of Kamprad's name, the name of the family farm, Elmtaryd, and the nearby village of Agunnard. But Ikea's low prices undercut the Swedish cartel of the time and the company was boycotted.
Kamprad turned to Polish producers for inexpensive furniture components for flat packs.
Company doctrine is enshrined in Kamprad's The Furniture Dealer's Testament, which many refer to as the "Ikea bible". The tome is peppered with maxims such as "wasting resources is a mortal sin at Ikea" and "only when sleeping does one make no mistakes".
A study London University released last week provides a revealing insight into the Ikea doctrine. It found that the vast maze-like interiors of Ikea stores were deliberately designed to confuse customers, who were more likely to make irrational snap purchases of the household items they came across.
Kamprad moved to Switzerland in 1976 to avoid Sweden's punitive wealth taxes. He drives a 15-year-old Volvo 240, rarely wears a suit and is known to haggle for bargains in his village near Lausanne. He even admits to popping into Ikea stores to get a "cheap meal".
The miserly reputation is, in part, a deliberate attempt to enhance Ikea's value-for-money image. Less known is the fact that Kamprad owns a large country estate in Sweden and a vineyard in Provence. He also drove a Porsche for several years.
Company savings policies drive his determination to fly economy class.
"How the hell can I ask people who work for me to travel cheaply, if I travel in luxury?" he once asked in an interview. "It's a question of good leadership."
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The billionaire who flies economy class
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