Ikea’s
Double-Edged Living Wage Initiative
By
Phil Mattera, Dirt
Diggers Digest
In
an era of rising inequality, the announcement by Ikea that it will adopt a living
wage policy for employees at its stores in the United States is good news for
those who will enjoy a fuller paycheck. Yet the news is not as good as it could
be.
Ikea’s
move, like a similar action by Gap Inc. earlier this year, is a voluntary
initiative, not a legislated or negotiated policy that can be enforced. Just as
Ikea adopted the wage policy on its own, it could rescind or modify that policy
in the future.
It’s
significant that in its announcement Ikea noted that the new wage structure,
which will raise the average hourly minimum to $10.76, does not apply to those
working at its U.S. distribution centers and manufacturing facilities. That’s
because, the company says, those facilities “have hourly wage jobs that are
already paying minimum wages above the local living wage.”
What
Ikea fails to mention is that some of those workers are represented by
collective bargaining agreements that brought pay rates to their current
levels. Also omitted is the fact that those unions were organized because of
poor conditions, including inadequate wages.
That
campaign served as a springboard for a successful union organizing effort at
the plant, where IAM members ratified their first contract with the company in
December 2011. A month later, workers at the Ikea distribution center in
Perryville, Maryland voted in favor of representation by the IAM. In May 2014
Teamster members at an Ikea distribution facility in Washington State
approved their initial contract.
It’s
quite possible that Ikea’s new wage policy for its stores is an effort to
undermine any union organizing at those outlets. For if there is one thing
large companies hate more than paying higher wages, it is paying those higher
wages and having to negotiate on other
conditions of work.
The
desire by management to retain control is the shortcoming of both voluntary
wage increases and other initiatives undertaken under the rubric of corporate social
responsibility.
What proponents of CSR rarely acknowledge is that these
supposedly enlightened corporate policies really amount to an effort to avoid
stricter, enforceable regulations.
Companies would prefer to congratulate
themselves for deciding to cut greenhouse gas emissions or eliminate toxics
rather than being compelled to take such actions under government mandate. A
management-designed wage increase is more palatable than a union contract.
Corporate
apologists would have us believe that CSR is preferable to tough regulations
and collective bargaining, but what they fail to acknowledge is that major
corporations have a long history of engaging in abusive practices.
In
the case of Ikea, taking advantage of weak labor laws in the United States is far
from the whole story. Two years ago, Ikea was forced to apologize after an
investigation showed that
it had benefitted from forced prison labor in East Germany in the 1980s.
There
were similar reports concerning
Cuba. And now the company is facing allegations that during the same period it
channeled funds to a firm run by the secret police in Romania.
Earlier,
Ikea was embroiled in controversies over the use of child labor in
countries such as Pakistan, India, Vietnam and the Philippines. One way the
company sought to overcome that stigma was through philanthropic initiatives
such as a partnership the Ikea Foundation created in
2013 with Save the Children and UNICEF to help children in Pakistan “find a
route out of child labor.”
Unaddressed, of course, was the issue of how
companies such as Ikea got them into child labor in the first place through
their use of exploitative contractors.
The
same issue applies to the wages of Ikea’s U.S. store employees. There would be
no need for a living wage initiative if the company had not been paying too
little to begin with.
That’s the problem with much of CSR and voluntary
corporate reforms: they are all too often initiatives designed to address
problems that companies created themselves and are structured in a way that
does not prevent them from reverting to those bad practices again in the
future.