Generally, The Subject Matter of IHRM Is Covered Under Three Headings

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Generally, the subject matter of IHRM is covered under three headings:

In broad terms, authors in the cross-cultural tradition argue that every nation has its own unique
sets of deep-lying values and beliefs, and that these are reflected in the ways that societies operate,
and in the ways that the economy operates and people work and are managed at work. The
comparative HRM tradition focuses more specifically on the way that people work and explores
the differences between nations in the way that they manage this process. In general, the
comparative tradition makes more of the institutional differences than the cultural differences.
International HRM (and its more recent strategic derivative, SIHRM) examines the way
organizations manage their human resources across these different national contexts.

Cross-cultural management
A key factor in the increasing internationalization of employment is that there are cultural
differences between nations differences in national values and attitudes. Many of us have
stereotypes of taciturn Finns, ebullient Spaniards, work-obsessed Americans, polite Japanese,
modest Malays, etc. These are stereotypes: even though the next Finn we meet may be loud and
confident, the next Spaniard quiet and reserved, and so on, they indicate real, general, truths. There
is now plenty of research evidence (see Chapter 2) that different nationalities do have different
values and that these affect the way people organize, conduct and manage work. An awareness of
cultural differences is therefore an essential part of an international HR managers brief.

The normal HR activities such as recruitment and selection, training and development, reward and
performance appraisal, may all be affected by cultural values and practices in the respective host
countries. As a result, great care must be taken when deciding whether or not to adopt standardised
HR policies and practices throughout the world.

Comparative human resource management


The distinction between comparative human resource management and international human
resource management has been clearly made by Boxall (1995). Comparative human resource
management explores the extent to which HRM differs between different countries or
occasionally between different areas within a country or different regions of the world, such as
North America, the Pacific Rim states or Europe (Brewster and Larsen, 2000). We know that
countries may be small or large, have more or fewer regional differences, include one or many
language groups, and be more or less economically developed. More immediately, we know that
they may have different labour markets and education systems, different employment laws and
trade unions, and the different cultural expectations that we have already noted. It should be no
surprise, therefore, to find that employment systems differ noticeably between countries and that
managing human resources has to vary from country to country.

International human resource management

International HRM examines the way in which international organisations manage their human
resources across these different national contexts. The international context adds extra complexity
to the manage ment of people beyond that found in a purely national setting. The organisation that
manages people in different institutional, legal, and cultural circumstances has to be aware not
only of what is allowed and not allowed in the different nations and regions of the world, but also
of what makes for cost-effective management practices. To take one often-quoted example: a
performance appraisal system which depends upon US-style openness between manager and
subordinate, each explaining plainly how they feel the other has done well or badly in their job,
may work in some European countries. However, it is unlikely to fit with the greater hierarchical
assumptions and loss-of-face fears of some of the Pacific countries. It may even be unlawful in
some states. The literature is replete with examples of such home-country practices that may be
allowed in other countries but which depress rather than improve productivity and ffectiveness.
Organisations that address IHRM, therefore, have to deal not just with a variety of practices but
also with a range of policy and even strategy issues. IHRM explores how MNEs manage the
demands of ensuring that the organisation has an international coherence in and cost-effective
approach to the way it manages its people in all the countries it covers, while at the same time
ensuring that it is responsive to the differences in assumptions and in what works from one location
to another. This includes, in particular, the management of those people who have to work
internationally.

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