TY - JOUR
T1 - Forgotten travelers: Adjustment and career implications of international business travel for expatriates
AU - Dimitrova, Mihaela
AU - Chia, Sherwin
AU - Shaffer, Margaret
AU - Tay-Lee, Cheryl
PY - 2020
Y1 - 2020
N2 - In this study, we demonstrate the importance of assessing international business travel in the context of expatriation. Based on the Job Demands-Resources theory, we suggest that engaging in international business travel is beneficial for expatriates when certain conditions are in place and detrimental when they are not. We propose that expatriates who have adequate job resources will reap the benefits of international business travel and achieve better adjustment to living and working in the host country and have greater career satisfaction. Survey results based on a sample of 161 expatriates provide support that engaging in international business travel is positively and indirectly related to expatriates' career satisfaction through expatriate adjustment when job resources are abundant, and it has a negative indirect association when resources are low. We further find that job resources play a role in the relationship between international business travel and career satisfaction primarily when the host-country culture is similar to that of the home country.
AB - In this study, we demonstrate the importance of assessing international business travel in the context of expatriation. Based on the Job Demands-Resources theory, we suggest that engaging in international business travel is beneficial for expatriates when certain conditions are in place and detrimental when they are not. We propose that expatriates who have adequate job resources will reap the benefits of international business travel and achieve better adjustment to living and working in the host country and have greater career satisfaction. Survey results based on a sample of 161 expatriates provide support that engaging in international business travel is positively and indirectly related to expatriates' career satisfaction through expatriate adjustment when job resources are abundant, and it has a negative indirect association when resources are low. We further find that job resources play a role in the relationship between international business travel and career satisfaction primarily when the host-country culture is similar to that of the home country.
UR - https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S107542531830437X?via%3Dihub
U2 - 10.1016/j.intman.2019.100707
DO - 10.1016/j.intman.2019.100707
M3 - Journal article
SN - 1075-4253
VL - 26
JO - Journal of International Management
JF - Journal of International Management
IS - 1
ER -