Expatriate staffing in foreign subsidiaries of Japanese multinational corporations in the PRC and the United States |
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Authors: | Andrew Delios Ingmar Bjorkman |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Management , Lingnan University , Tuen Mun, Hong Kong, Republic of China wongyt@ln.edu.hk;3. Department of Management , The Chinese University of Hong Kong , Shatin, Hong Kong, Republic of China |
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Abstract: | This study examines expatriate staffing in foreign wholly-owned subsidiaries and joint ventures of Japanese firms located in the People's Republic of China and the United States. Expatriates are conceptualized as performing two primary functions. The first is a control function in which the expatriate works to align the operations of the subsidiary with that of the Japanese parent. The second function is a knowledge role. In this role, either the expatriate acts to transfer the Japanese parent's knowledge to the subsidiary or the expatriate is an agent for the acquisition of host-country knowledge. We tested for these two functions using subsidiary-level data on Japanese firms' operations in China and the US. Our results indicate that the control function was more prominent in joint ventures in China than in the US. The results also indicate that expatriates played a more significant knowledge-transfer function role in technology and marketing-intensive industries in China than in the US. A lack of MNC experience in China was found to be associated with limited use of expatriates. Finally, expatriate employment was negatively related to the number of subsidiaries of the parent company worldwide. |
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Keywords: | China Expatriates Japan Multinationals Mncs Prc Selection Staffing Training Usa |
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