By The Financial District

Jun 16, 20211 min

IKEA FINED $1.2M FOR SPYING ON ITS FRENCH EMPLOYEES

A French court on Tuesday ordered IKEA to pay a 1 million euro ($1.2 million) fine for spying on its French staff after the world's biggest furniture retailer was found guilty of improperly gathering and storing data on its employees.

The French branch of Ingka Group, which owns most IKEA stores worldwide, was accused of snooping on its workers and some clients over several years, Caroline Pailliez reported for Reuters.

IKEA employs around 10,000 people in France, its third-biggest market after Germany and the United States, and has experimented with new formats there, including a store launched in 2019 in the heart of Paris.

The flatpack furniture group, which has recognized there were some improper practices, was accused of breaching employees' privacy by reviewing records of their bank accounts and sometimes using fake employees to write up reports on staff.

Worker representatives said the information was used to target union leaders in some cases or used to IKEA's advantage in disputes with customers after the firm trawled data on people's finances and even what cars they drove. It was also found to have paid for access to police files.

Prosecutors had been pushing for a 2 million euro fine. Lawyers for France's CGT union and several individuals seeking compensation said the final amount was not hefty but welcomed the outcome.

"It's the symbolism here that matters," said Solene Debarre, a lawyer representing the CGT. The company said it was reviewing the court decision to see if further measures were needed after it took steps to stamp out the surveillance tactics.

WEEKLY FEATURE : PAL READY TO SOAR WITH PANDEMIC