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BENGALURU - IKEA India plans to source more products locally to combat rising inflation, as the Swedish furniture group looks to sell more to the country's burgeoning middle class with the launch of its latest store on Wednesday.
The company's fourth and biggest store in India opened in the country's tech hub of Bengaluru, four years after IKEA entered the Indian market.
The store, spread over 460,000 square feet, will sell a wide selection of the brand's home products and furnishings, including the popular Billy bookcase and Fargrik mugs.
The furniture maker is betting big on home furnishings in Bengaluru, where rental spaces are more affordable and bigger than Mumbai, where IKEA has two stores.
As prices soar, the average Indian is becoming more conscious of spending on non-essential items.
India's retail inflation touched an eight-year high in April, easing marginally last month.
"We need to work on local sourcing which will help us to lower prices even more. We are working with our own costs to keep them down as much as possible, so that is how we navigate with affordability," Susanne Pulverer, Chief Executive Officer and Chief Sustainability Officer at IKEA India, told Reuters on Tuesday.
IKEA sources about 25% to 27% of its products locally, with a goal to increase that to at least half in the long term.
The company said it had been sourcing textiles and carpets locally in India for a long time and it planned to broaden that to its wood-based flatline furniture.
Still, high import duty has always been a sore point for global corporates to operate in India, with import tax on furniture at 25%.
"Import duty has an impact on prices and competition and it is not a fully open market but it is a part of doing business," Pulverer added.
(Reporting by Tanvi Mehta in Bengaluru; Editing by Ed Osmond and Muralikumar Anantharaman)