OBHR chapter 15

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Economic system

Free enterprise Socialism Communism

Transnational representation

reflect the multinational compositions of a company's managers

Parent company

the country in which a company's corporate headquarters is located

Host country

the country in which the parent-company organization seeks to locate or has already located a facility

Transnational process

the extent to which a company's planning and decision-making processes include representatives and ideas from a variety of cultures

Education

- human capital Productivity Capabilities KSAO's

Four levels of global participation

Domestic, International, Multinational, Global

Political-legal system

Laws Societal norms How business works - payoffs & bribes

Three types of country status

Parent company, Host country, third country

Selection of expatriate managers on 3 key adaptive skills

Self-dimension, relationship-dimension, perception-dimension

Practices that support effective expatriation

Staffing and selection, training and career development, performance appraisal and compensation

Self-dimension

positive self image

Validation

recognition for your efforts abroad

Global

state-of-art products top-quality products - Leather from Italy, cloth from India etc.

Compensation of expatriates has four components

•Base salary •Tax equalization allowances •Benefits •Additional allowances to make the assignments more attractive

Staffing and selection

•Communicate the value of international assignments for the company's global mission •Ensure that those with the highest potential move internationally •Provide short term assignments to increase the pool of employee's international experience

Performance appraisal and compensation

•Differentiate performance management based on expatriate roles •Align incentives with expatriation objectives •Taylor benefits to the expatriate's needs •Focus on equality of opportunities, not cash •Emphasize rewarding careers rather than short-term outcomes

Recent global changes in HR

•European union and BREXIT •North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) to USCMA - the purpose was to create freer and fairer trade among the countries •Tax Cut and Jobs Act - TCJA - Changed global taxation •Growth of Asia •General agreement on tariffs and trade (GATT)

Expatriation and repatriation activities

•Involve the family in the orientation program at the beginning and end of the assignment •Establish mentor relationships between expatriates and executives from the home location •Provide support for dual careers •Secure opportunities for the returning manager to use knowledge and skills learned while on the international assignment

Training and career development

•Make international planning part of the career development process •Encourage early international experience •Create learning opportunities during the assignment •Use international assignments as a leadership development tool

Training and development of expatriates

•Work environment •Language •Job or task characteristics •Leisure time •Urbanity •Work-life balance •Living quarters •Family life •Local friendships Contact to those left behind

Transnational scope

a company's ability to make HRM decisions from an international perspective

Relationship-dimension

ability to foster relationships with host-country nationals

Perception dimension

ability to perceive and evaluate the host environment

Communication

ability to recognize changes in your home country

Multinational

companies that build facilities in numerous countries to leverage costs - identical products

Third country

A country other than the host or parent country

Re-Acculturation of expatriates

Communication, Validation

International

Companies expanding from their home country

Factors affecting HRM in global markets

Culture, Education, Political-legal system, Economic System, Immigration

Expatriate

employee sent by his or her company to manage operations in a different country

Host-company nationals (HCNs)

employees born and raised in a host, not parent, country

Third-country nationals (TCNs)

employees born in a country other than a parent or host country

Parent-company nationals (PCN's)

employees who were born and live in a parent country

Types of international employees

expatriate, parent-company nationals, host-company nationals, third-country nationals

Domestic

home country


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