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  • Human resource management in Chinese multinationals in the United Kingdom: The interplay of institutions, culture, and strategic choice

    Author(s)
    Khan, Z
    Wood, G
    Tarba, SY
    Rao-Nicholson, R
    He, S
    Griffith University Author(s)
    Wood, Geoffery
    Year published
    2019
    Metadata
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    Abstract
    This is a study of the challenges faced by Chinese expatriate managers and their strategic responses in securing a workable degree of alignment in UK subsidiaries, against a backdrop of competing home‐country and host‐country pressures. Although much of the literature on home‐country and host‐country effects tends to either adopt a culture or an institutional approach, this study highlights the intermeshed nature of the two. In locating cultural dynamics within an institutional firmament, this study juxtaposes the effects of each and draws conclusions as to their intersection. It is founded on in‐depth interviews with ...
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    This is a study of the challenges faced by Chinese expatriate managers and their strategic responses in securing a workable degree of alignment in UK subsidiaries, against a backdrop of competing home‐country and host‐country pressures. Although much of the literature on home‐country and host‐country effects tends to either adopt a culture or an institutional approach, this study highlights the intermeshed nature of the two. In locating cultural dynamics within an institutional firmament, this study juxtaposes the effects of each and draws conclusions as to their intersection. It is founded on in‐depth interviews with home‐country and host‐country managers. The findings suggest, on the one hand, Chinese expatriate managers tended to see local regulations as an obstacle to efficiency, rather than as a means to access context‐specific complementarities. On the other hand, these managers recognized the need to fit in with established locally specific ways of doing things and in securing sufficient staff buy in to sustain operations, and played a key intermediary role between headquarters and subsidiary.
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    Journal Title
    Human Resource Management
    DOI
    https://doi.org/10.1002/hrm.21935
    Subject
    Business systems in context not elsewhere classified
    Business systems in context
    Human resources and industrial relations
    Strategy, management and organisational behaviour
    Publication URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10072/381527
    Collection
    • Journal articles

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