Chapter 18 - Global Human Resource Management Chapter 18 Global Human Resource Management True / False Questions 1. (p. 626) Equal employment legislation is strongly pursued in all countries. FALSE Difficulty: Medium 2. (p. 627) Superior human resource management can be a sustained source of high productivity and competitive advantage in the global economy. TRUE Difficulty: Easy 3. (p. 627) A firm that pursues an international strategy tries to create value by emphasizing local responsiveness. FALSE Difficulty: Easy 4. (p. 627) A company that is successful at a localization strategy will realize experience curve and location economies. FALSE Difficulty: Medium 18-1
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Chapter 18 - Global Human Resource Management
Chapter 18Global Human Resource Management
True / False Questions
1. (p. 626) Equal employment legislation is strongly pursued in all countries. FALSE
Difficulty: Medium
2. (p. 627) Superior human resource management can be a sustained source of high productivity and competitive advantage in the global economy. TRUE
Difficulty: Easy
3. (p. 627) A firm that pursues an international strategy tries to create value by emphasizing local responsiveness. FALSE
Difficulty: Easy
4. (p. 627) A company that is successful at a localization strategy will realize experience curve and location economies. FALSE
Difficulty: Medium
5. (p. 628) Staffing policy involves the selection of employees for particular jobs. TRUE
Difficulty: Easy
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6. (p. 628) An organization's norms and value systems are known as its corporate culture. TRUE
Difficulty: Easy
7. (p. 628) The most attractive staffing policy is the ethnocentric approach. FALSE
Difficulty: Medium
8. (p. 628) A firm with an ethnocentric staffing policy will fill all key management positions with parent-country nationals. TRUE
Difficulty: Medium
9. (p. 628) A firm, following a polycentric approach to staffing believes that the host country lacks qualified individuals to fill senior management positions. FALSE
Difficulty: Medium
10. (p. 629) There is an increasing trend towards an ethnocentric staffing policy. FALSE
Difficulty: Medium
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11. (p. 629) A firm that adopts a polycentric approach to staffing is likely to suffer from cultural myopia. FALSE
Difficulty: Medium
12. (p. 629) Firms may choose an ethnocentric approach to staffing as opposed to a polycentric approach because of the cost savings it promotes. FALSE
Difficulty: Medium
13. (p. 630) A geocentric staffing policy seeks the best people for key jobs throughout the organization, regardless of nationality. TRUE
Difficulty: Medium
14. (p. 630) Many firms adopt a geocentric policy toward staffing because it is a relatively inexpensive staffing policy. FALSE
Difficulty: Medium
15. (p. 631) A citizen of Japan who moves to the United States to work at Microsoft would be classified as an inpatriate. TRUE
Difficulty: Easy
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16. (p. 631) Research suggests that only between 6 and 10 percent of all American employees sent abroad to developed nations return from their assignments early. FALSE
Difficulty: Medium
17. (p. 632) Research into expatriate failure revealed that consistently, one of the reasons for the premature return of employees for U.S. multinationals was the inability of the spouse to adjust. TRUE
Difficulty: Easy
18. (p. 632) For European firms, the top reason for expatriate failure was the inability of the manager to cope with larger overseas responsibilities. FALSE
Difficulty: Medium
19. (p. 633) Domestic performance and overseas performance potential are not the same thing. TRUE
Difficulty: Medium
20. (p. 633) An expatriate needs to have language fluency to show willingness to communicate. FALSE
Difficulty: Medium
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21. (p. 634) The ability to understand why people of other countries behave the way they do is perceptual ability. TRUE
Difficulty: Easy
22. (p. 635) A manager who has a global mindset will adapt to a culture that is very different from his/her own. TRUE
Difficulty: Easy
23. (p. 635) Research by International Orientation Resources suggests that 90 percent of the time employees were selected on the basis of their cross-cultural fluency. FALSE
Difficulty: Medium
24. (p. 636) Historically, most international businesses have been more concerned with management development than with training. FALSE
Difficulty: Medium
25. (p. 636) Expatriate failure can be reduced through cultural training, language training and practical training. TRUE
Difficulty: Easy
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26. (p. 636) It is not possible to conduct business nearly all over the world using only English. FALSE
Difficulty: Medium
27. (p. 637) In many cases, firms fail to plan for an expatriate's repatriation. TRUE
Difficulty: Medium
28. (p. 638) Bringing managers together in one location for extended periods and rotating them through different jobs in several countries helps the firm build a formal management network. FALSE
Difficulty: Medium
29. (p. 639) Intentional bias makes it difficult to evaluate the performance of expatriate managers objectively. FALSE
Difficulty: Medium
30. (p. 639) Many expatriate managers believe that headquarters management evaluates them unfairly and does not fully appreciate the value of their skills and experience. TRUE
Difficulty: Easy
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31. (p. 639-640) Most expatriates believe that more weight should be given to an on-site manager's appraisal than to an off-site manager's appraisal. TRUE
Difficulty: Easy
32. (p. 640) In ethnocentric firms, the lack of managers' mobility among national operations implies that pay can and should be kept country-specific. FALSE
Difficulty: Medium
33. (p. 641) Base pay in most firms is set with regard to global market conditions. FALSE
Difficulty: Medium
34. (p. 642) The most common approach to expatriate pay is the balance sheet approach. TRUE
Difficulty: Easy
35. (p. 642) An expatriate's base salary normally varies from the base salary for a similar position in the home country. FALSE
Difficulty: Medium
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36. (p. 643) A foreign service premium is offered as an inducement to accept foreign postings. TRUE
Difficulty: Easy
37. (p. 644) Labor unions generally try to get better working conditions for their members through collective agreement with management. FALSE
Difficulty: Medium
38. (p. 645) The short-term goal of ITSs was to be able to bargain transnationally with multinational firms. FALSE
Difficulty: Medium
39. (p. 645) There is now a trend toward greater decentralized control. FALSE
Difficulty: Medium
40. (p. 645) The general rise in competitive pressure in industry after industry has made it more important for firms to control their costs. FALSE
Difficulty: Medium
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Multiple Choice Questions
41. (p. 626) _____ refers to the activities an organization carries out to utilize its human resources effectively. A. Organizational behaviorB. Strategic managementC. Human resource managementD. Organizational policy
Difficulty: Easy
42. (p. 631) A citizen of one country who is working abroad in one of the firm's subsidiaries is known as a(n) A. Subsidiary managerB. Foreign managerC. International managerD. Inpatriate manager
Difficulty: Easy
43. (p. 627) _____ is/are the linchpin of a firm's organization architecture. A. PeopleB. StrategyC. Business processesD. Organizational structure
Difficulty: Medium
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44. (p. 627) A firm following a(n) _____ strategy will try to create value by realizing experience curve and location economies. A. LocalizationB. Domestic focusedC. Global standardizationD. International
Difficulty: Medium
45. (p. 627) Firms should build a strong corporate culture and an informal management network for transmitting information and knowledge within the organization if they are pursuing a(n) A. Transnational strategyB. Localization strategyC. Global standardization strategyD. International strategy
Difficulty: Medium
46. (p. 628) Which of the following is mainly concerned with the selection of employees for particular jobs? A. Retention policyB. Staffing policyC. Incentive policyD. Appraisal policy
Difficulty: Easy
47. (p. 628) An organization's norms and value systems are known as A. Human resource managementB. Corporate governanceC. Business ethicsD. Corporate culture
Difficulty: Medium
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48. (p. 628) An ethnocentric staffing policy is one in which A. All key management positions are filled by parent company nationalsB. Host-country nationals are recruited to manage subsidiaries while parent-company nationals occupy key positions at corporate headquartersC. The best people, regardless of nationality, are recruited to fill key positions throughout the organizationD. Corporate bureaucracy overwhelms the system leaving key positions to be filled in a haphazard manner
Difficulty: Medium
49. (p. 628) This policy for staffing involves filling all key management positions with parent company nationals. A. PolycentricB. RegiocentricC. EthnocentricD. Geocentric
Difficulty: Medium
50. (p. 628) Many Japanese firms prefer expatriate Japanese managers to head their foreign operations because these managers have been socialized into the firm's culture while employed in Japan. This implies that A. The firm may believe that such managers cannot progress beyond senior positions in their parent companyB. The firm may see an ethnocentric staffing policy as the best way to maintain a unified corporate cultureC. The firm is trying to create value by transferring core competencies to a foreign operationD. The firm requires host-country nationals to be recruited to manage subsidiaries
Difficulty: Hard
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51. (p. 628) A firm that is trying to maintain a unified corporate culture will pursue a(n) A. Geocentric staffing policyB. Regiocentric staffing policyC. Ethnocentric staffing policyD. Polycentric staffing policy
Difficulty: Medium
52. (p. 628) If a firm is trying to create value by transferring core competencies to a foreign operation and believes that the best way to do accomplish this goal is to transfer parent-country nationals who have knowledge of that competency to the foreign operation, it is pursuing a(n) A. Ethnocentric strategyB. Transnational strategyC. Localization strategyD. Global standardization strategy
Difficulty: Easy
53. (p. 629) A polycentric approach to staffing is one in which A. All key management positions are filled by parent company nationalsB. Host-country nationals are recruited to manage subsidiaries while parent-company nationals occupy key positions at corporate headquartersC. The best people, regardless of nationality, are recruited to fill key positions throughout the organizationD. Corporate bureaucracy overwhelms the system leaving key positions to be filled in a haphazard manner
Difficulty: Medium
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54. (p. 629) The use of a(n) _____ staffing policy is declining in most countries because of the limited opportunities it provides for host-country nationals and also because it can lead to cultural myopia. A. RegiocentricB. GeocentricC. PolycentricD. Ethnocentric
Difficulty: Medium
55. (p. 629) Cultural myopia refers to a firm's failure to A. Adapt to certain ethnocentric cultures through the expatriateB. Help female Western managers in many cultures which are extremely male-dominatedC. Understand host-country cultural differences that require different approaches to marketing and managementD. Identify countries which are much tougher postings than others because their cultures are more unfamiliar and uncomfortable
Difficulty: Easy
56. (p. 629) What is the reason for a decline in pursuing an ethnocentric staffing policy in most international businesses? A. It is expensive to implementB. It limits advancement opportunities for host-country nationalsC. A gap can arise between host-country managers and parent-country managersD. The lack of management transfers from home to host countries
Difficulty: Hard
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57. (p. 629) If a company recruits host-country nationals to manage subsidiaries while parent-country nationals occupy key positions at corporate headquarters, the firm is following a(n) A. Ethnocentric staffing policyB. Regiocentric staffing policyC. Polycentric staffing policyD. Geocentric staffing policy
Difficulty: Medium
58. (p. 629) What is the advantage of adopting a polycentric approach? A. It is inexpensive to implement and reduces the costs of value creationB. Host-country nationals have opportunities to gain experience outside their own countryC. It enables the firm to make the best use of its human resourcesD. It enables the firm to build a cadre of international executives who feel at home working in a number of cultures
Difficulty: Hard
59. (p. 629) What is the major drawback with a polycentric approach? A. Training and relocation costs increase when transferring managers from country to countryB. It can lead to cultural myopiaC. It limits advancement opportunities for host-country nationalsD. The gap that can form between host-country managers and parent-country managers
Difficulty: Hard
60. (p. 630) A polycentric approach may be effective for firms pursuing a(n) A. International strategyB. Localization strategyC. Transnational strategyD. Global standardization strategy
Difficulty: Easy
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61. (p. 630) Food and detergents giant Unilever had foreign subsidiaries that had evolved into quasi-autonomous operations, each with its own strong national identity. They objected strenuously to corporate headquarters' attempts to limit their autonomy. Thus, Unilever found it very difficult to shift from a strategic posture that emphasized localization to a transnational posture because of A. Difficulty in achieving the coordination required to pursue experience curve and location economiesB. The difficulty in achieving coordination required to transfer core competenciesC. The federation that resulted from a polycentric approachD. Expensive implementation and increased costs of value creation
Difficulty: Hard
62. (p. 630) What is the most important advantage of using a geocentric staffing policy? A. It enables the firm to build a cadre of international executives who feel at home working in a number of culturesB. It may be less expensive to implement than other policies, reducing the costs of value creationC. The higher pay managers on an international fast track enjoy is a source of inspiration within a firmD. It involves no costs of training and relocation when transferring managers from country to country
Difficulty: Hard
63. (p. 630) Which of the following is a problem that limits a firm's ability to pursue a geocentric policy? A. The lack of management transfers from home to host countries and vice versa, can lead to a lack of integration between corporate headquarters and foreign subsidiariesB. The higher pay managers on an international fast track enjoy may be a source of resentment within a firmC. The firm fails to understand host-country cultural differences that require different approaches to marketing and managementD. It limits advancement opportunities for host-country nationals
Difficulty: Hard
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64. (p. 630) A geocentric approach to staffing is one in which A. All key management positions are filled by parent company nationalsB. Host-country nationals are recruited to manage subsidiaries while parent-country nationals occupy key positions at corporate headquartersC. The best people, regardless of nationality, are recruited to fill key positions throughout the organizationD. Corporate bureaucracy overwhelms the system leaving key positions to be filled in a haphazard manner
Difficulty: Medium
65. (p. 630) An ethnocentric approach to staffing is appropriate for firms that are pursuing a(n) A. International strategyB. Localization strategyC. Global standardization strategyD. Transnational strategy
Difficulty: Medium
66. (p. 631) What is the advantage of using an ethnocentric staffing approach? A. Uses human resources efficientlyB. Alleviates cultural myopiaC. Inexpensive to implementD. Helps transfer core competencies
Difficulty: Medium
67. (p. 631) Firms may avoid the polycentric approach to staffing because A. It produces resentment in host country and can lead to cultural myopiaB. It limits career mobility and isolates headquarters from foreign subsidiariesC. It may be difficult to implement as a result of national immigration policies and it is expensive to implementD. It is expensive to implement and it can lead to cultural myopia
Difficulty: Medium
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68. (p. 631) A citizen of France who moves to Germany to work at BMW is a(n) A. Host-country nationalB. LocalC. InpatriateD. Acquired citizen
Difficulty: Medium
69. (p. 631) The premature return of an expatriate manager to his/her home country is known as A. RepatriationB. Expatriate failureC. Inpatriate failureD. Foreign manager failure
Difficulty: Medium
70. (p. 632) For American multinationals, the biggest impediment to expatriate success is A. The inability of the spouse to adjustB. The manager's inability to adjustC. The manager's inability to cope with larger overseas responsibilitiesD. The manager's personal or emotional maturity
Difficulty: Medium
71. (p. 632) Among Japanese companies, the most commonly cited reason for expatriate failure is A. The manager's inability to adjustB. The inability of the spouse to adjustC. The manager's personal or emotional maturityD. The manager's inability to cope with larger overseas responsibilities
Difficulty: Medium
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72. (p. 632) European firms believe that the main reason for failure among expatriates is A. The manager's inability to cope with larger overseas responsibilitiesB. The inability of the spouse to adjustC. The manager's inability to adjustD. The manager's personal or emotional maturity
Difficulty: Medium
73. (p. 632) According to research, American companies experience an expatriate failure rate that is A. Similar to that of Japanese firmsB. Similar to that of European companiesC. Higher than both European and Japanese enterprisesD. Lower than both European and Japanese multinationals
Difficulty: Medium
74. (p. 633) Mendenhall and Oddou's "others-orientation" dimension, in their study on what predicts success in foreign jobs postings, refers to A. The expatriate's self-esteem, self-confidence and mental well-beingB. The expatriate's ability to interact effectively with host-country nationalsC. The expatriate's ability to understand why people of other countries behave the way they doD. The relationship between the country of the assignment and how well an expatriate adjusts to a particular posting
Difficulty: Medium
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75. (p. 633) Which dimension of Mendenhall and Oddou's study suggests that an expatriate with high self-esteem, self-confidence and mental well-being is likely to succeed in a foreign job posing? A. Self-orientationB. Others-orientationC. Cultural toughnessD. Perceptual ability
Difficulty: Easy
76. (p. 633) In terms of enhancing the expatriate's ability to interact effectively with host-country nationals, which of the following factors is particularly important? A. Perceptual abilityB. High self-esteemC. Mental well-beingD. Relationship development
Difficulty: Easy
77. (p. 634) Expatriate managers who lack this dimension of predicting success in a foreign posting tend to treat foreign nationals as if they were home-country nationals. A. Others-orientationB. Self-orientationC. Perceptual abilityD. Cultural toughness
Difficulty: Medium
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78. (p. 635) Mendenhall and Oddou identified cultural toughness as one of the dimensions in their study on what predicts success in foreign jobs postings. This dimension refers to A. The expatriate's self-esteem, self-confidence and mental well-beingB. The expatriate's ability to interact effectively with host-country nationalsC. The expatriate's ability to understand why people of other countries behave the way they doD. The relationship between the country of the assignment and how well an expatriate adjusts to a particular posting
Difficulty: Medium
79. (p. 635) According to some researchers, this is the fundamental attribute of a global manager and is characterized by cognitive complexity and a cosmopolitan outlook. A. A global mindsetB. Cultural toughnessC. High self-esteemD. Perceptual ability
Difficulty: Medium
80. (p. 636) Which of the following is true about cultural training? A. It should be provided only to the expatriateB. Training should be limited to a study of language and business practicesC. It helps the expatriate appreciate the host-country cultureD. It can be offered to the spouse/family after it is clear the foreign posting is a success
Difficulty: Medium
81. (p. 639) _____ makes it difficult to evaluate the performance of expatriate managers objectively. A. Soft dataB. Hard dataC. KnowledgeD. Bias
Difficulty: Medium
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82. (p. 639) When evaluating expatriates, home-country managers usually rely on A. The manager's ability to develop cross-cultural awarenessB. Hard data such as market shareC. The ability of the expatriate to work with local managersD. Their own international experience
Difficulty: Medium
83. (p. 642) Which of the following is the most common approach to expatriate pay? A. Balance sheet approachB. Net-to-net approachC. Host-country approachD. Higher of host or home
Difficulty: Medium
84. (p. 642) Which approach to expatriate pay equalizes purchasing power across countries so employees can enjoy the same living standard in their foreign posting that they enjoyed at home? A. Higher of host or homeB. Net-to-net approachC. Host-country approachD. Balance sheet approach
Difficulty: Medium
85. (p. 643) Which component of a typical expatriate compensation package compensates the expatriate for having to live in an unfamiliar country isolated from family and friends, deal with a new culture and language and adapt to new work habits and practices? A. BenefitB. Cost-of-living allowanceC. Base salaryD. Foreign service premium
Difficulty: Easy
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86. (p. 643) This allowance is paid when the expatriate is being sent to a location where such basic amenities as health care, schools and retail stores are grossly deficient by the standards of the expatriate's home country. A. HousingB. HardshipC. Cost-of-livingD. Education
Difficulty: Easy
87. (p. 644) Labor unions generally try to get better pay, greater job security and better working conditions for their members through _____ with management. A. Collective bargainingB. ArbitrationC. ConciliationD. Expert determination
Difficulty: Medium
88. (p. 644) Unions' bargaining power is derived largely from their A. Ability to threaten to disrupt productionB. Ability to change the organizational cultureC. Willingness to adapt to new employment practicesD. Ability to show restraint in negotiations
Difficulty: Medium
89. (p. 645) What is the long-term goal of international trade secretariats? A. To reduce the competition between national unionsB. To be able to bargain transnationally with multinational firmsC. To reduce the ideological gap between union leaders in different countriesD. To get national and international bodies to regulate multinationals
Difficulty: Hard
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90. (p. 645) What is the main difference in the way international businesses approach international labor relations? A. The degree to which organized labor can limit the choices of an international businessB. The way work is organized within a plantC. The degree to which labor relations activities are centralized or decentralizedD. The way staffing, management development and compensation activities are organized
Difficulty: Hard
Essay Questions
91. (p. 626) Discuss the complexities of human resource management in an international firm. What are the key issues facing firms in this area?
The activities an organization carries out to use its human resources effectively are referred to as human resource management. These activities include determining the firm's human resource strategy, staffing, performance evaluation, management development, compensation and labor relations. The strategic role of HRM is more complex in an international business, where profound differences between countries in labor markets, culture, legal systems, economic systems and the like complicate staffing, management development, performance evaluation and compensation activities.
Difficulty: Medium
92. (p. 627) What are the four strategies pursued by international companies and what is the role of HRM in these?
The four strategies pursued by international businesses are localization, where value is created by emphasizing local responsiveness; international, where value is created by transferring products and competencies overseas; global standardization, where value is created by realizing experience curve and location economies; and transnational, where value is created by doing all of these things simultaneously. HRM policies must be congruent with the firm's strategy.
Difficulty: Medium
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93. (p. 628) What is the relationship between a firm's staffing policy and its corporate culture?
A firm's selection of employees for particular jobs is its staffing policy. A staffing policy not only involves the selection of individuals who have the skills required to do a particular job, it also can be a tool for developing and promoting the desired corporate culture or norms and values systems, of the firm.
Difficulty: Medium
94. (p. 628-630) What are the three types of staffing policies in international business? Briefly describe each one. Which is the most attractive approach and why?
There are three types of staffing approaches in international business. First, the ethnocentric approach is one in which all key management positions are filled by parent-country nationals. Second, the polycentric approach involves recruiting host-country nationals to manage subsidiaries while parent-country nationals occupy key positions at corporate headquarters. Third, the geocentric policy seeks the best people for key jobs throughout the organization, regardless of nationality. This approach is probably the most attractive because it enables the firm to make the best use of its human resources and it allows the firm to build a cadre of international executives who feel at home working in a number of cultures.
Difficulty: Hard
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95. (p. 628-629) Why should a firm pursue an ethnocentric approach to staffing? What are the disadvantages of this approach?
Firms pursue an ethnocentric staffing policy for three reasons. First, the firm may believe there is a lack of qualified individuals in the host country to fill senior management positions. Second, the firm may see an ethnocentric staffing policy as the best way to maintain a unified corporate culture. Third, if the firm is trying to create value by transferring core competencies to a foreign operation, it may feel that the best way to do this is to transfer parent-country nationals who have knowledge of that competency to the foreign operation.The ethnocentric approach to staffing is on the wane for two reasons. First, the policy limits advancement opportunities for host-country nationals, which can lead to resentment, lower productivity and increased turnover among that group. Second, the policy can lead to cultural myopia.
Difficulty: Medium
96. (p. 629) You are the vice-president of human resources for your firm. Your boss has asked you to research the advantages and disadvantages of a polycentric approach to staffing. What will you tell your boss?
A polycentric staffing policy requires host-country nationals to be recruited to manage subsidiaries, while parent-country nationals occupy key positions at corporate headquarters. One advantage of adopting a polycentric approach is that the firm is less likely to suffer from cultural myopia. Host-country managers are unlikely to make the mistakes arising from cultural misunderstandings that expatriate managers are subject to. Another advantage of the polycentric approach is that it may be less expensive than other approaches to implement. By hiring host-country personnel to fill management positions, the firm will not incur a significant amount of expatriate expense. However, because host-country nationals have limited opportunities for advancement, resentment may arise. Furthermore, a gap may form between host-country managers and parent-country managers leading to a lack of integration between corporate headquarters and foreign subsidiaries.
Difficulty: Medium
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97. (p. 631-632) What is expatriate failure? How prevalent is the problem? What is the cost to a firm of a failed assignment?
Expatriate failure represents a failure of the firm's selection policies to identify individuals who will not thrive abroad. The consequences include premature return from a foreign posting and high resignation rates. For American firms, expatriate failure is particularly high among expatriates who are sent to developing countries. Almost 70 percent of such employees will return home early as compared to the 16 to 40 percent of employees sent to developed nations that return prior to the completion of their assignments. It has been estimated that the cost of each failure runs between $250,000 and $1 million. In addition, approximately 30 to 50 percent of American expatriates stay at their international assignments, but are considered ineffective or marginally effective by their firms.
Difficulty: Medium
98. (p. 632) Discuss the reasons why expatriate managers fail to complete their foreign assignment. Do the reasons for expatriate failure differ by nationality?
The question of why expatriates fail to complete their foreign assignments was studied by R. L. Tung who found that U.S. firms experienced a significantly higher failure rate than either European or Japanese firms. For American firms, the reasons for expatriate failure, in order of importance, were: (1) inability of spouse to adjust, (2) manager's inability to adjust, (3) other family problems, (4) the manager's personal or emotional maturity and (5) inability to cope with larger overseas responsibilities. However, for Japanese firms the reasons for expatriate failure, in order of importance, were: (1) inability to cope with larger overseas responsibilities, (2) difficulties with new environment, (3) personal or emotional problems, (4) lack of technical competence and (5) inability of spouse to adjust. Perhaps the most striking difference between these two lists is that the importance of the spouse was most important for U.S. expatriate managers but ranked only fifth for Japan. This difference reflects the traditional separation of work from home life in Japanese culture. Finally, European firms gave only one reason to explain expatriate failure: the inability of a spouse to adapt. Tung's research has been confirmed by a number of subsequent studies of expatriate failure.
Difficulty: Medium
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99. (p. 633) Failure of the spouse to adjust was the top reason given for expatriate failure in American firms, the only reason given for expatriate failure in European firms and the number five reason given by Japanese firms. Discuss the reasons behind the difficulties a spouse faces in adapting to a new country.
The failure of spouse to adjust appears to be related to a several factors. Often spouses find themselves in a foreign country without the familiar network of family and friends. Language differences make it difficult for them to make new friends, making the spouse feel trapped at home. If immigration rules prohibit employment, the spouse may find it even more difficult to adapt. Research suggests that a main reason managers now turn down international assignments is concern over the impact the assignment might have on their spouse's career.
Difficulty: Medium
100. (p. 633-635) Discuss Mendenhall and Oddou's assertion that an executive who performs well in a domestic setting may not adapt to a different cultural setting.
According to Mendenhall and Oddou, many managers tend to equate domestic performance with overseas performance potential. However, the researchers suggest that success in a foreign job posting depends not on domestic performance, but instead on four dimensions. First, an expatriate's self-orientation will affect performance. Expatriates with high self-esteem, self-confidence and mental well-being are more likely to succeed in foreign jobs. Second is others-orientation. The more effectively an expatriate interacts with host-country nationals, the more likely he/she is to succeed. Third, an expatriate's perceptual abilities are important to success. Managers need to be able to understand why people of other countries behave the way they do. Finally, cultural toughness is a measure of how well an expatriate adjusts to a particular situation, especially when the assignment involves a culture that is very different from the home-country culture.
Difficulty: Medium
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101. (p. 636-637) What are the three types of training for expatriate managers? Why is this type of training so important to managers and their families?
Training can help a manager and spouse cope with issues of adjusting to the foreign environment. Three types of training are important. Cultural training seeks to foster an appreciation for the host country's culture. The belief is that understanding a host country's culture will help the manager empathize with the culture, which will enhance his/her effectiveness in dealing with host-country nationals. Language training is vital to an expatriate's ability to interact with host-country nationals. Finally, practical training is aimed at helping the expatriate manager and family ease themselves into day-to-day life in the host country.
Difficulty: Medium
102. (p. 637) Discuss why the repatriation process is so difficult for so many expatriates. How could the difficulties associated with repatriation be alleviated?
Preparing expatriates for reentry into their home-country organization is generally overlooked, yet represents a huge challenge for firms. One study of repatriated employees found that 60 to 70 percent did not know what their position would be when they returned home and 40 percent left the firm within three years of repatriation. To avoid this type of scenario, firms need to develop programs for reintegrating expatriates back into work-life within their home-country organization. A firm that does not adequately plan for repatriation runs the risk of not realizing the gains that could be made from expatriates sharing their knowledge and experiences.
Difficulty: Medium
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103. (p. 637-639) Describe the notion of management development programs as a tool for increasing the overall skill levels of managers. What is the goal of this type of program?
Management development programs are designed to increase the overall skill levels of managers through a mix of ongoing management education and rotations of managers through a number of jobs within the firm to give them a broad range of experience. The goal of this type of program is to improve overall productivity and quality of the firm's management resources. As a strategic tool, management development programs can play an important role in international businesses. These programs can help a firm build a corporate culture that is sensitive to international business issues. Moreover, by rotating managers, firms can build informal management networks, networks that can then be used as a conduit for exchanging information within an organization.
Difficulty: Medium
104. (p. 639) Discuss the issue of how to evaluate performance of expatriate managers. What problems arise for companies as they make such evaluations?
It can be very difficult to evaluate the performance of expatriate managers objectively because of unintentional bias. A host-country manager may be biased by his/her own cultural frame of reference and expectations, while a home-country manager may be biased by distance and his/her own lack of experience working abroad. In fact, home-country managers tend to rely on hard data to evaluate an expatriate's performance, data that may reflect factors outside the expatriate's control. This reliance on hard data has led many expatriates to complain that because "soft" variables are also important to their success, they are not getting fair evaluations. Indeed, one study found that over half of the expatriates questioned believed that a foreign assignment was either detrimental or immaterial to their career.
Difficulty: Medium
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105. (p. 639-640) How can firms reduce the bias in performance appraisals of expatriate managers?
Unintentional bias makes it difficult to evaluate the performance of expatriate managers objectively. This bias can be reduced in several ways. First, most expatriates believe that more weight should be given to an on-site manager's appraisal than to an off-site manager's appraisal. If the on-site manager is of the same nationality as the expatriate manager, cultural bias can also be reduced. Finally, when the policy is for foreign on-site managers to write performance evaluations, home-office managers, in an effort to avoid cultural misunderstandings, should be consulted before an on-site manager completes a formal termination evaluation.
Difficulty: Medium
106. (p. 640) Should a firm pay executives in different countries according to the prevailing standards in each country or should it equalize pay on a global basis?
Substantial differences exist in the compensation of executives at the same level in various countries. These differences raise the question of whether a firm should pay its expatriate managers the prevailing wage rate in the country that they are working in or whether the firm should pay all of its expatriate managers at the same level of responsibility a similar amount of pay? For a U.S. firm, this could mean raising the compensation of foreign nationals to U.S. levels, a policy that could prove to be very expensive. Yet, if a firm does not equalize pay, it could cause considerable resentment among foreign nationals who work with U.S. managers.
Difficulty: Hard
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107. (p. 642) What is the most common approach to expatriate pay? Explain what comprises this form of compensation. What is the advantage of this approach?
The most common approach to expatriate pay is the balance sheet approach. This approach has the advantage of equalizing purchasing power across countries so that employees can enjoy the same living standard in their foreign posting as they enjoyed at home. The approach provides financial incentives to offset qualitative differences between locations. The typical expatriate compensation package is comprised of a base salary, a foreign-service premium, allowances of various types, tax differentials and benefits.
Difficulty: Medium
108. (p. 643) Consider the allowance component of a typical expatriate compensation package. What types of allowance are included in this component?
There are four types of allowances that are usually included in an expatriate's compensation package. A hardship allowance is paid when the expatriate is being sent to a location where basic amenities are grossly deficient as compared to the home country. A housing allowance may be included to ensure that the expatriate can afford the same quality of housing in the foreign country as in the home country. A cost-of-living allowance may be paid to ensure that the expatriate enjoys the same standard of living in the foreign location as at home. Finally, education allowances may be included to ensure that an expatriate's children receive adequate schooling.
Difficulty: Medium
109. (p. 644) Discuss the concerns of organized labor.
A principle concern of domestic unions about multinational firms is that a company can counter its bargaining power with the power to move production to another country. Another concern is that an international business will keep highly skilled tasks in its home country and farm out only low-skilled tasks to foreign plants. A final concern arises when an international business attempts to import employment practices and contractual agreements from its home country. When these practices are alien to the host country, organized labor fears the change will reduce its influence and power.
Difficulty: Medium
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110. (p. 644-645) What are the three actions taken by organized labor to respond to the increased bargaining power of multinationals? How successful have these efforts been?
Organized labor has responded to the increased bargaining power of multinationals by taking three actions. First, organized labor is trying to establish international labor organizations. Second, labor is lobbying for national legislation to restrict multinationals. Finally, organized labor is trying to achieve international regulations on multinationals through organizations such as the UN. To date, success in these efforts has been limited.