Ikea Case Study, writing homework help

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IKEA Case Study

As part of your reading for this unit, you read the "IKEA Aims to Pay a Living Wage" case study on page 391 of Fundamentals of Human Resource Management. Respond to the two questions below in a 2–3 page paper. Be sure to include enough detail to provide context for your ideas and to demonstrate your understanding of these concepts. Also, be sure to include all necessary APA citations and a references page. Submit your responses in a Microsoft Word document and attach it to the assignments area.

Questions

  1. What are some risks and challenges IKEA is likely to face as a result of basing its minimum pay on the living wage formula, rather than just legal requirements and the market rate?
  2. Given that IKEA's management considers the living wage to be consistent with the company's mission, what advice would you give the company for implementing it successfully?

Requirements

  • Written communication: It should be free of errors, so that the overall message is clear.
  • APA formatting: Resources and citations are formatted according to APA style.
  • Number of resources: Minimum of two scholarly resources. Distinguished submissions will likely exceed that minimum.
  • Parts of paper:
    • Title page.
    • Body of paper.
    • References page.
  • Font and font size: Times New Roman, 12-point.

Unformatted Attachment Preview

IKEA Aims to Pay a Living Wage Along with a legal requirement to pay at least the minimum wage, some employers also see a social responsibility requirement to pay workers at least a living wage—that is, enough to provide themselves and their families with the basics of daily life. Paying a living wage is one way to treat employees with dignity. Sweden-based furniture and home furnishings retailer IKEA is among the companies that have committed to paying a living wage. IKEA recently announced that in the United States it would raise the lowest hourly wage it pays, going from $9.17 per hour to a nationwide average of $10.76. The change affects about half of the employees in its 38 existing stores and will apply to those hired at new locations. The $10.76 figure is not a set amount that will apply nationwide, but an average across facilities. IKEA intends to calculate a minimum for each store based on the local cost of living. It uses the MIT Living Wage Calculator, which factors in the costs of food, housing, taxes, and transportation. IKEA's wages will be based on the amounts calculated for a single person without children. In Pittsburgh and West Chester, Ohio, the minimum will be just $8.69; at the other extreme, workers in Woodbridge. Virginia, will receive wages starting at $13.22 per hour. Thus, wages are influenced by employee needs, not solely based on market rates. IKEA also said it would review wages every year but did not commit to raising rates every time the calculator shows a higher cost of living. Before the wage increase. IKEA already exceeded the federal minimum wage of $7.25. And even if the president can convince Congress to accept his idea of raising the minimum to $10.10 per hour, IKEA's minimum will continue exceeding the national requirement. IKEA also is generous relative to competitors. Gap, whose stores include Banana Republic and Old Navy, recently announced it would phase in an increase to $9 in 2014 and then to $10 in 2015. Following IKEA's announcement of the new $10.76 minimum wage, Walmart's Twitter account sent a tweet saying its “average hourly wage for full and part time associates is $11.81." However, Walmart did not draw a comparison with its hourly minimum. IKEA sees the establishment of a living wage as supporting its mission of creating a better everyday life for people—in this case, its employees. Rob Olson, IKEA's chief financial officer, indicated that the company does not intend to raise prices to make up for the added expense of higher wages. Rather, it hopes that because the company "invests in" its employees, they in turn will invest more of themselves in the stores and their customers.
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Explanation & Answer

Attached.

Running head: LIVING WAGE-IKEA

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Living Wage-IKEA
Institution Affiliation
Date

LIVING WAGE-IKEA

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Q. What are some risks and challenges IKEA is likely to face as a result of basing its
minimum pay on the living wage formula, rather than just legal requirements and the
market rate?
Different countries around the world have several requirements that have to be met by
companies that operate in them one of them being the wage to be paid to the employees of the
company. Minimum wage refers to the lowest compensation that is allowed to be paid to an
employee by the employer as recommended by the law. In the USA, the companies have to
pay their employees the minimum wage that is set by the federal government. The minimum
wage is paid per hour and it is set at $7.25 nationwide even though some st...


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