Title: International Business chapter 13
1ISG BBA PROGRAM Spring semester
BUS 470 International Business
Lecture 9 Global Human Resource Management
Staffing policy, Expatriates, Rapatriates, HRM
Strategies
Chapter 13
Tuesday, March 27th 2007
Guillaume Sarrat de Tramezaigues
www.gstblog.com
2Human Resource Management (HRM)
- Refers to the activities an organization carries
out to use its human resources effectively - Four major tasks of HRM
- Staffing policy
- Management training and development
- Performance appraisal
- Compensation policy
3International Human Resource Management
- Strategic role HRM policies should be congruent
with the firms strategy and its formal and
informal structure and controls - Task complicated by profound differences between
countries in labor markets, culture, legal, and
economic systems
4Staffing Policy
- Staffing policy
- Selecting individuals with requisite skills to do
a particular job - Tool for developing and promoting corporate
culture - Types of Staffing Policy
- Ethnocentric
- Polycentric
- Geocentric
5Ethnocentric Policy
- Key management positions filled by parent-country
nationals - Best suited to international businesses
- Advantages
- Overcomes lack of qualified managers in host
nation - Unified culture
- Helps transfer core competencies
- Disadvantages
- Produces resentment in host country
- Can lead to cultural myopia
6Polycentric Policy
- Host-country nationals manage subsidiaries
- Parent company nationals hold key headquarter
positions - Best suited to multi-domestic businesses
- Advantages
- Alleviates cultural myopia
- Inexpensive to implement
- Helps transfer core competencies
- Disadvantages
- Limits opportunity to gain experience of host
country nationals outside their own country - Can create gap between home and host country
operations
7Geocentric Policy
- Seek best people, regardless of nationality
- Best suited to global and trans-national
businesses - Advantages
- Enables the firm to make best use of its human
resources - Equips executives to work in a number of cultures
- Helps build strong unifying culture and informal
management network - Disadvantages
- National immigration policies may limit
implementation - Expensive to implement due to training and
relocation - Compensation structure can be a problem
8Comparison of Staffing Approaches
9The Expatriate Problem
- Expatriate citizens of one country working in
another - Expatriate failure premature return of the
expatriate manager to his/her home country - Cost of failure is high estimate 3X the
expatriates annual salary plus the cost of
relocation (impacted by currency exchange rates
and assignment location) - Inpatriates expatriates who are citizens of a
foreign country working in the home country of
their multinational employer
10Reasons for Expatriate Failure
- US multinationals
- Inability of spouse to adjust
- Managers inability to adjust
- Other family problems
- Managers personal or emotional immaturity
- Inability to cope with larger overseas
responsibilities - European multinationals
- Inability of spouse to adjust
- Japanese Firms
- Inability to cope with larger overseas
responsibilities - Difficulties with the new environment
- Personal or emotional problems
- Lack of technical competence
- Inability of spouse to adjust
11Expatriate Failure Rate
12Expatriate Selection
- Reduce expatriate failure rates by improving
selection procedures - An executives domestic performance does not
(necessarily) equate to his/her overseas
performance potential - Employees need to be selected not solely on
technical expertise, but also on cross-cultural
fluency
13Four Attributes that Predict Success
- Self-Orientation
- Possessing high self-esteem, self-confidence and
mental well-being - Others-Orientation
- Ability to develop relationships with host
country nationals - Willingness to communicate
14Four Attributes that Predict Success
- Perceptual Ability
- The ability to understand why people of other
countries behave the way they do - Being nonjudgmental and flexible in management
style - Cultural Toughness
- Relationship between country of assignment and
the expatriates adjustment to it
15Training and Management Development
- Training Obtaining skills for a particular
foreign posting - Cultural training Seeks to foster an
appreciation of the host countrys culture - Language training Can improve expatriates
effectiveness, aids in relating more easily to
foreign culture, and fosters a better firm image - Practical training Ease into day-to-day life of
the host country
16Training and Management Development
- Development Broader concept involving developing
managers skills over his or her career with the
firm - Several foreign postings over a number of years
- Attend management education programs at regular
intervals
17Repatriation of Expatriates
- A critical issue in the training and development
of expatriate managers is preparing them for
reentry into their home country - Repatriation should be seen as the final link in
an integrated, circular process that selects,
trains, sends, and brings home expatriate
managers - Research shows that there is a problem with the
repatriation process
18Repatriation of Expatriates
19Management Development and Strategy
- Development programs designed to increase the
overall skill levels of managers through - Ongoing management education
- Rotation of managers through a number of jobs
within the firm to give broad range of
experiences - Used as a strategic tool to build a strong
unifying culture and informal management network - Above techniques support transnational and global
strategies
20Performance Appraisal
- Problems
- Unintentional bias
- Host nation biased by cultural frame of reference
- Home country biased by distance and lack of
experience working abroad - Expatriate managers believe that headquarters
unfairly evaluate and under-appreciate them - In a survey of personnel managers in U.S.
multinationals, 56 stated foreign assignment
either detrimental or immaterial to ones career
21Guidelines for Performance Appraisal
- More weight should be given to on-site managers
evaluation as they are able to recognize the soft
variables - Expatriate who worked in same location should
assist home-office manager with evaluation - If foreign on-site managers prepare an
evaluation, home-office manager should be
consulted before completion of formal evaluation
22Compensation
- Two issues
- Pay executives in different countries according
to the standards in each country or equalize pay
on a global basis - Method of payment
23Expatriate Pay
- Typically use balance sheet approach
- Equalizes purchasing power to maintain same
standard of living across countries - Provides financial incentives to offset
qualitative differences between assignment
locations
24Components of Expatriate Pay
- Base Salary
- Same range as a similar position in the home
country - Foreign service premium
- Extra pay for work outside country of origin
- Allowances
- Hardship, housing, cost-of-living, and education
allowances - Taxation
- Firm pays expatriates income tax in the host
country - Benefits
- Level of medical and pension benefits identical
overseas
25International Labor Relations
- Key Issue
- Degree to which organized labor can limit the
choices of an international business - Aims to foster harmony and minimize conflicts
between firms and organized labor
26Concerns of Organized Labor
- Multinational can counter union bargaining power
with threats to move production to another
country - Multinational will keep highly skilled tasks in
its home country and farm out only low-skilled
tasks to foreign plants - Easy to switch locations if economic conditions
warrant - Bargaining power of organized labor is reduced
- Attempts to import employment practices and
contractual agreements from multinationals home
country
27Strategy of Organized Labor
- Attempts to establish international labor
organizations - Lobby for national legislation to restrict
multinationals - Attempts to achieve international regulations on
multinationals through such organizations as the
United Nations