190 likes | 276 Views
Human Resource ManagementIdentifying international managersSelection criteriaThe compensation packageAdjustment and repatriationLabor RelationsDefinitionImportance, challenges and strategyComparative labor relationsFuture challenges. Identifying International Managers. Home-country nationa
E N D
1. Organizational Behavior Human Resource Management and Labor Relations
2. Human Resource Management
Identifying international managers
Selection criteria
The compensation package
Adjustment and repatriation
Labor Relations
Definition
Importance, challenges and strategy
Comparative labor relations
Future challenges
3. Identifying International Managers Home-country nationals (expatriates)
Preferred in ethnocentric organizations and in initiating international new operations
Host-country nationals
Preferred in polycentric organizations and when local knowledge or lower costs are important factors
Third-country nationals
Common in regiocentric or geocentric organizations and when selection is based primarily on expertise
Inpatriates
Common in geocentric organizations to promote diversity and develop global core competencies
4. Selection Criteria General selection criteria
Leadership, motivation, adaptability, independence, self-reliance
Experience, education, knowledge of local language
Physical and emotional health, age, support of spouse and children
Self-evaluation and preparation
Is an international assignment really for me?
Does my spouse support the decision?
Do I have the necessary technical skills?
Am I ready to invest in learning about the country?
5. The Compensation Package Balance-sheet approach: Ensures expatriate does not lose money from the assignment
Complementary approach: Negotiation of a mutually acceptable ad hoc arrangement
Localization: Expatriate salary comparable to salaries paid host-country nationals
Lump sum method: Upfront incentive payment
Cafeteria approach: Compensation package based on a series of individualized options
Regional system: Set compensation for all expatriates assigned to a particular region
6. The Relocation Transition Curve
7. Repatriation of Expatriates Reasons for returning to home country
agreed-on tour of duty is over
want children educated in a home-country school
are not happy in the overseas assignment
failed to do a good job
Key sources of readjustment problems
“Out of sight, out of mind” syndrome
Organizational changes
Technological advances
Adjusting to the new job back home
8. Adjustment Problems and Transition Strategies The main problems of repatriation include
Adjusting to life back home
Financial package not as good as overseas
Less autonomy in the stateside job
No career counseling from the company
Transition Strategies
Repatriation agreements
Mentor programs
Maintaining constant contact
Cultural re-entry programs
9. Labor Relations Definition
The process through which management and workers identify and determine the job relationships that will be in effect in the workplace
Labor relations mechanisms are used to determine, among others considerations,
wages
working hours
working conditions
related areas such as vacations and benefits
10. Labor Relations and MNC Importance
Directly impact labor costs and productivity
Indirect impact through linkages to political issues
Increasingly part of global agreements
Challenges
Differ significantly from country to country
Labor relations climates reflect
cultural values and orientations
historical development and experiences
legal regimes, and the relative power of government, industry and workers
Effective worldwide strategies require a balancing of global and local pressures
11. Challenges for the MNC Labor relations differ significantly from country to country
Labor relations climates reflect
Cultural values and orientations
Historical development and experiences
Legal regimes and the relative power of government, industry and workers
Effective worldwide labor relations strategies require a balancing of global and local pressures and forces
12. Labor Relations Strategy Management philosophy
Ethnocentric, poly/regiocentric and geocentric approaches
Managing labor costs
Pursuing low-cost strategies in emerging economies
Some workers are grossly exploited in some countries – toiling for long hours, in unsafe conditions, for minimum pay.
Reducing labor costs in home-countries
Part-time work, shift work, non-permanent employment, and subcontracting
13. Days Lost to Labor Disputes, 1993-2002
14. Labor Relations in the U.S. About 12% of US workforce is unionized
Shift in the US to greater labor-management cooperation
Negotiations generally follow a formalized processes of collective bargaining resulting in
legally binding agreements on wages, hours, and conditions of employment
a definition of grievance procedures and conditions that limit strikes
Non-adversarial approaches to resolving disputes
15. Labor Relations in Europe European firms typically negotiate agreements with unions at the national level
Many European unions have more political power than U.S. unions
Salaried employees in Europe (including those at managerial levels) often have unions of their own
European unions have existed longer than those in the United States and occupy a more accepted position in society
16. Labor Relations in Japan Japanese unions are relatively weak (enterprise unions)
Social custom dictates non-confrontational union–management behavior
Cultural value of Wa
Disputes are settled in an amicable manner though sometimes resolved by third-party mediators or arbitrators
Strikes and lockouts in Japan are very rare
Strikes severe following WWII, but today only to make a point
17. Labor Relations in Emerging Economies (China, India, SEA) Organized sector is usually a small part of the economy
Labor unions are generally fragmented (often as a result of anti-union legislation)
Labor unions are politicized or co-opted by powerful political actors and elites
As a result
employees are less likely to initiate actions or organize unions to negotiate for improved working conditions, and
workers are often compelled to accept conditions of work set by management
18. Industrial Disputes in Emerging, Transition and Developed Countries
19. Future Challenges MNCs are under increasing pressure to upgrade working conditions and labor practices at manufacturing and other facilities
NGOs and other groups pressure MNCs to adhere to international standards and adopt new and more stringent codes of conduct
Increasing standards of living and demands for democratization increase local pressure on MNCs to improve labor conditions