The furniture sector has a wood origin problem at its core: the most prized furniture woods — teak, mahogany, rosewood, ebony — come overwhelmingly from tropical forests in countries with poor democratic governance, where logging controls are weakest, enforcement is most easily corrupted, and the people most affected by deforestation have the least political power to prevent it. Simultaneously, the mass furniture market is dominated by a Swedish company operating globally with complex supply chains, while truly democratic-origin premium furniture exists in Scandinavian and Central European artisan traditions that most consumers never encounter.
Teak is the most democratically contested premium furniture wood. Myanmar (2.12 EIU — one of the world's lowest-scoring democracies, with a military junta that conducted a coup in 2021 and has killed thousands of civilians) is the world's largest teak producer. The Myanmar military has used teak exports as a funding source for its operations, making teak imports from Myanmar a direct financing mechanism for an authoritarian regime with documented atrocities. The EU and US have implemented sanctions on Myanmar teak, but illegal teak export through third countries — Thailand (6.67 EIU), Laos (1.79 EIU), and others — remains a documented practice. Teak from Indonesia (6.53 EIU, just below threshold) is a more ambiguous case: plantation teak exists with legal certification, but Indonesian forestry enforcement remains inconsistent.
The FSC (Forest Stewardship Council) and PEFC certifications were designed precisely to address this democratic and environmental complexity in timber supply chains. FSC certification requires verification of legal harvesting, labor rights compliance, and environmental protection standards from independent auditors. It does not guarantee democratic country-of-origin, but it provides a significantly more rigorous traceability floor than uncertified tropical hardwood. For furniture buyers applying democratic criteria, FSC-certified wood is the minimum acceptable standard when the species and origin are in question. Without it, there is no credible basis for claims about responsible sourcing.
IKEA (Sweden, 9.51 EIU — one of the world's highest-scoring democracies) is the elephant in the room of any democratic furniture analysis. The company is Swedish-founded and Swedish in cultural DNA, but its manufacturing and sourcing span dozens of countries with very variable democratic profiles. IKEA's wood sourcing includes Poland (6.84 EIU), Romania (7.77 EIU), Lithuania (7.55 EIU), and increasingly countries like Vietnam (2.97 EIU) and China (2.12 EIU). IKEA has made commitments through its IWAY supplier code and through FSC certification of a significant proportion of its wood supply, but the complexity of its supply chain means that individual IKEA products have very different democratic origin profiles. A Billy bookcase manufactured in Älmhult, Sweden has a different profile than an equivalent piece assembled in Vietnam from components sourced across Southeast Asia.
Fritz Hansen (Denmark, 9.28 EIU) is the reference Danish furniture brand — home of the Egg Chair, the Swan, the Series 7 — with manufacturing primarily in Denmark and manufacturing philosophy rooted in craft and longevity rather than volume and price. Carl Hansen & Søn (Denmark), another premium Danish furniture maker, uses primarily Danish-crafted woodwork with FSC-certified materials. These brands are expensive relative to IKEA or mass-market furniture, but they represent the combination of democratic corporate origin, democratic manufacturing location, and product design philosophy — durability over disposability — that most closely aligns with Democratic Market's values.
Domestically sourced European timber — oak, ash, beech, walnut, cherry — from sustainably managed European forests managed under EU forestry regulations offers the clearest democratic origin profile available for solid wood furniture. Several regional furniture traditions across Germany, Austria, France, and Scandinavia use local timber with direct supply chains from forest to workshop. Small-scale furniture makers in these traditions — available through independent design shops and direct commissions — may have less marketing visibility than global brands but offer the most transparent democratic supply chain available in the furniture market.
The practical democratic hierarchy for furniture purchasing: locally crafted solid wood furniture from European democratic timber sources is the highest tier, available from artisan makers with transparent supply chains. Danish or Swedish premium design brands (Fritz Hansen, Carl Hansen, String, Hay) represent the second tier — Nordic democratic corporate origin with primarily democratic manufacturing. FSC-certified European-manufactured furniture using sustainable European timber is the third tier. IKEA with specific product-level origin research (Swedish-manufactured products significantly better than Vietnamese-manufactured ones) is accessible mid-tier with variable democratic profiles. Teak from uncertified sources, particularly Myanmar-origin teak, remains the clearest exclusion regardless of how it is marketed.
The EU Timber Regulation (EUTR) and its successor the EU Deforestation Regulation (EUDR), applying from 2025 to a broader range of commodities including wood, represent regulatory enforcement of the democratic sourcing argument for furniture. The EUDR requires companies placing wood products, cattle, soy, palm oil, cocoa, coffee, and other deforestation-risk commodities on the EU market to verify that they were not produced on deforested land after December 31, 2020. For furniture, this means EU importers must exercise due diligence on the timber origins of their products — exactly the traceability that democratic purchasing requires. Non-compliant products face market bans and fines. The regulation effectively mandates a minimum level of the supply chain transparency that Democratic Market advocates, with the EU's own enforcement authority backing it.
The practical implication for furniture purchasing: FSC certification has been the voluntary standard for timber traceability for 30 years. The EUDR makes a version of that traceability legally required, which means that over the next 2-3 years, European furniture retailers will need to have stronger documentation of timber origins across their ranges. Consumers who demand FSC certification today are ahead of the regulatory curve and rewarding brands that already have the systems in place. For teak specifically, Myanmar-origin teak is already sanctioned by EU measures — the EUDR adds a deforestation dimension that reinforces the democratic exclusion. Indonesian and Malaysian FSC-certified plantation teak remains the most available democratic alternative in the teak furniture segment, with European oak, ash, and walnut representing the most fully democratic option for hardwood furniture buyers who can work with European species.
The EUDR's full entry into force in 2025 and its enforcement ramp-up through 2026 means that European furniture retailers without robust timber traceability documentation will face market surveillance actions from national authorities, converting the democratic supply chain argument from a consumer preference into a regulatory compliance requirement.
This article was originally published at Democratic Market. Read the full version with additional analysis on our site.
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