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Chapter
18 Outline
Chapter Summary
This chapter focused on human resource management in international
businesses. HRM activities include human resource strategy, staffing,
performance evaluation, management development, compensation, and labor
relations. None of these activities is performed in a vacuum; all must
be appropriate to the firm's strategy. This chapter made the following
points:
- Firm success requires HRM policies to be congruent
with the firm's strategy and with its formal and informal structure
and controls.
- Staffing policy is concerned with selecting employees
who have the skills required to perform particular jobs. Staffing policy
can be a tool for developing and promoting a corporate culture.
- An ethnocentric approach to staffing policy fills all
key management positions in an international business with parent-country
nationals. The policy is congruent with an international strategy. A
drawback is that ethnocentric staffing can result in cultural myopia.
- A polycentric staffing policy uses host-country nationals
to manage foreign subsidiaries and parent-country nationals for the
key positions at corporate headquarters. This approach can minimize
the dangers of cultural myopia, but it can create a gap between home
and host-country operations. The policy is best suited to a multidomestic
strategy.
- A geocentric staffing policy seeks the best people for
key jobs throughout the organization, regardless of their nationality.
This approach is consistent with building a strong unifying culture
and informal management network and is well suited to both global and
transnational strategies. Immigration policies of national governments
may limit a firm's ability to pursue this policy.
- A prominent issue in the international staffing literature
is expatriate failure, defined as the premature return of an expatriate
manager to his or her home country. The costs of expatriate failure
can be substantial.
- Expatriate failure can be reduced by selection procedures
that screen out inappropriate candidates. The most successful expatriates
seem to be those who have high self-esteem and self-confidence, get
along well with others, are willing to attempt to communicate in a foreign
language, and can empathize with people of other cultures.
- Training can lower the probability of expatriate failure.
It should include cultural training, language training, and practical
training, and it should be provided to both the expatriate manager and
the spouse.
- Management development programs attempt to increase the
overall skill levels of managers
- through a mix of ongoing management education and rotation
of managers through different jobs within the firm to give them varied
experiences. Management development is often used as a strategic tool
to build a strong unifying culture and informal management network,
both of which support transnational and global strategies.
- It can be difficult to evaluate the performance of expatriate
managers objectively because of unintentional bias. A number of steps
can be taken to reduce this bias.
- Country differences in compensation practices raise a
difficult question for an international business: Should the firm pay
executives in different countries according to the standards in each
country or equalize pay on a global basis?
- The most common approach to expatriate pay is the balance
sheet approach. This approach aims to equalize purchasing power so employees
can enjoy the same living standard in their foreign posting that they
had at home.
- A key issue in international labor relations is the degree
to which organized labor can limit the choices available to an international
business. A firm's ability to pursue a transnational or global strategy
can be significantly constrained by the actions of labor unions.
- A principal concern of organized labor is that the multinational
can counter union bargaining power with threats to move production to
another country.
- Organized labor has tried to counter the bargaining power of multinationals
by forming international labor organizations. In general, these efforts
have not been effective.
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