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The effects of market economy type and foreign MNE subsidiaries on the convergence and divergence of HRM

Elaine Farndale (), Chris Brewster (), Paul Ligthart and Erik Poutsma
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Elaine Farndale: Pennsylvania State University
Paul Ligthart: Radboud University
Erik Poutsma: Radboud University

Journal of International Business Studies, 2017, vol. 48, issue 9, No 3, 1065-1086

Abstract: Abstract This study explores patterns of human resource management (HRM) practices across market economies, and between indigenous firms and foreign MNE subsidiary operations, offering a novel perspective on convergence and divergence. Applying institutional theorizing to improve our understanding of convergence/divergence as a process and an outcome, data collected from nine countries at three points in time over a decade confirm that convergence and divergence occur to different extents in a nonlinear fashion, and vary depending on the area of HRM practice observed. Patterns of adoption and convergence/divergence are explained through the effect of institutional constraints, which vary between liberal and coordinated market economies, and between indigenous firms and foreign MNE subsidiaries. Specifically, we expected, and largely found supporting evidence confirming that compensation and wage-bargaining level practices show more evidence of being institutionally constrained, and hence were less likely to converge, than contingent employment, training, and direct information provision practices. The study contributes a more graded conceptualization of convergence/divergence (from constant no difference, through robust convergence, non-robust convergence, non-robust divergence, and robust divergence to constant difference), allowing us to tease out the subtle manifestations of the process that can incorporate the complex dynamic reality of international business.

Keywords: multilevel analysis; neo-institutional theory; human resource management (HRM); HR diffusion across countries; international organizations; comparative HRM (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2017
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (17)

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DOI: 10.1057/s41267-017-0094-8

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