Ingvar Kamprad, founder of Ikea

Born: March 30, 1926;

Died: January 27, 2018

INGVAR Kamprad, who has died aged 91, was the businessman who turned a small-scale mail order business into a global furniture empire Ikea.

His life story is intimately linked to the company he founded at age 17 on the family farm. His work ethic, frugality and down-to-earth style remain at the core of its corporate identity today, although there were also mis-steps in his life, including early flirtations with Nazism,.

Mr Kamprad created the company's name from his own initials and the first letters of the family farm, Elmtaryd, and the parish of Agunnaryd where it is located. It is in the heart of Smaland, a forested province whose people are known in Sweden for thrift and ingenuity.

Later in life, his name often appeared on lists of the world's richest men, but he never adopted the aura of a tycoon. He drove a modest Volvo and dressed unassumingly.

In a 1998 book that he co-authored about Ikea's history, he described his habit of visiting vegetable street markets right before they closed for the day, hoping to get a better price on their goods.

Born on March 30, 1926, Mr Kamprad was a precocious entrepreneur who sold matchboxes to neighbours from his bicycle. He found that he could buy them in bulk very cheaply from Stockholm, and sell them at a low price but still make a good profit.

From matches, he expanded to selling fish, Christmas tree decorations, seeds, and later ball-point pens and pencils.

Mr Kamprad soon moved away from making individual sales calls and began advertising in local newspapers and operating a makeshift mail-order catalogue.

He distributed his products via the local milk van, which delivered them to the nearby train station.

In 1950, Mr Kamprad first introduced furniture into his catalogue. The furniture was produced by local manufacturers in the forests close to his home.

After the positive response he received, he soon decided to discontinue all of the other products and focus on low-priced furniture.

Since then the Ikea concept – keeping prices low by letting the customers assemble the furniture themselves – offers affordable home furnishings at stores across the globe.

In 1994, the Swedish newspaper Expressen reported that Mr Kamprad had contacts with the Swedish fascist leader Per Engdahl in the 1940s and '50s.

In a letter to employees, Mr Kamprad admitted that he once had sympathies for the far-right leader and called it "a part of my life which I bitterly regret".

In the 1998 book, he gave more details about his youthful "delusions", saying he had been influenced as a child by his German grandmother's strong support for Hitler. His paternal grandparents emigrated to Sweden in the 1890s.

He moved to Switzerland in the late 1970s to avoid paying Swedish taxes, which at the time were the highest in the world. He decided to return home only after his wife Margaretha died in 2011.

In June 2013, Mr Kamprad announced that he would retire from the board which controls the Ikea brand as part of moves to hand responsibilities over to his son, Mathias.