TY - JOUR
T1 - Multinational enterprises within cultural space and place
T2 - Integrating cultural distance and tightness-looseness
AU - Shin, Duckjung
AU - Hasse, Vanessa C.
AU - Schotter, Andreas P.J.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© Academy of Management Journal.
PY - 2017/6/1
Y1 - 2017/6/1
N2 - Prior research into the effects of cultural differences between multinational enterprises' (MNEs') home and host countries on expatriate staffing decisions in foreign subsidiaries has produced a large number of conflicting findings. We address some of these conflicting findings and aim to advance theory in two ways. First, we draw on transaction cost economics to explain why and how the effects of cultural distance on the proportion of expatriate parent-country nationals form a curvilinear relationship, instead of a linear one as commonly proposed. Second, we integrate the values-based cultural distance concept with the norms-based tightness-looseness concept. This allows us to simultaneously account for cultural differences between countries and location-bound normative cultural effects within countries, which cannot be overcome solely through expatriate learning and adaptation. Using a large global dataset of Japanese MNEs, we find support for a convex relationship between cultural distance and the proportion of expatriate parent-country nationals. We also find a moderating (steepening) effect of tightness-looseness on this relationship. The results reconcile some of the tensions between the subjectivists' values-based approach, which positions culture in the shared cognitions realm, and the structuralists' approach, which places culture in a normative situational environment.
AB - Prior research into the effects of cultural differences between multinational enterprises' (MNEs') home and host countries on expatriate staffing decisions in foreign subsidiaries has produced a large number of conflicting findings. We address some of these conflicting findings and aim to advance theory in two ways. First, we draw on transaction cost economics to explain why and how the effects of cultural distance on the proportion of expatriate parent-country nationals form a curvilinear relationship, instead of a linear one as commonly proposed. Second, we integrate the values-based cultural distance concept with the norms-based tightness-looseness concept. This allows us to simultaneously account for cultural differences between countries and location-bound normative cultural effects within countries, which cannot be overcome solely through expatriate learning and adaptation. Using a large global dataset of Japanese MNEs, we find support for a convex relationship between cultural distance and the proportion of expatriate parent-country nationals. We also find a moderating (steepening) effect of tightness-looseness on this relationship. The results reconcile some of the tensions between the subjectivists' values-based approach, which positions culture in the shared cognitions realm, and the structuralists' approach, which places culture in a normative situational environment.
U2 - 10.5465/amj.2015.0423
DO - 10.5465/amj.2015.0423
M3 - Journal article
AN - SCOPUS:85023208034
SN - 0001-4273
VL - 60
SP - 904
EP - 921
JO - Academy of Management Journal
JF - Academy of Management Journal
IS - 3
ER -