2016
DOI: 10.1002/hrm.21788
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A Psychological Contract Perspective of Expatriate Failure

Abstract: The expatriate literature needs to move beyond maladjustment as a primary reason for expatriate failure. This article draws on the psychological contract as a valuable lens to observe changes in expatriate behavior that may determine expatriate success or failure on international assignments. Prior research on the expatriate psychological contract has focused solely on an expatriate's social exchange relationship with the assigning parent company. This article offers a dual‐foci perspective of the expatriate p… Show more

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Cited by 42 publications
(38 citation statements)
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References 117 publications
(205 reference statements)
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“…Therefore, rather than deploying a large number of PCNs to control the subsidiary managers, staffing of subsidiaries with an optimal composition of PCNs with HCNs may help to harness the positive benefits of multicultural team diversity (Stahl & Tung, 2015). Evidence on the dynamics between PCNs and HCNs in the subsidiaries of Korean MNEs suggests that trust and control are two of the major factors behind deploying PCNs by Korean MNEs to China (Kang & Shen, 2013) and India (Sinha, 2004 (Perera et al, 2016).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Therefore, rather than deploying a large number of PCNs to control the subsidiary managers, staffing of subsidiaries with an optimal composition of PCNs with HCNs may help to harness the positive benefits of multicultural team diversity (Stahl & Tung, 2015). Evidence on the dynamics between PCNs and HCNs in the subsidiaries of Korean MNEs suggests that trust and control are two of the major factors behind deploying PCNs by Korean MNEs to China (Kang & Shen, 2013) and India (Sinha, 2004 (Perera et al, 2016).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…PCNs bring several benefits such as effective control, coordination, and efficient transfer of strategic organizational practices Gong, 2003a) together with mitigating the agency problems through direct monitoring of subsidiary employees (Gong, 2003a). However, PCNs also pose many challenges such as their low level of commitment to the subsidiary, adjustment difficulties in the host country (Perera, Chew, & Nielsen, 2016;Shaffer, Harrison, & Gilley, 1999), and an inadequate understanding of the host country environment . Given the conflicting theoretical prediction and empirical evidence about the importance of PCNs for subsidiary performance, there is a need to develop a more comprehensive framework that acknowledges the alternative explanations and allows for the examination of contingency factors affecting staffing composition-subsidiary performance relationships (Cogin & Williamson, 2014).…”
Section: Subsidiary Staffing Composition and Performancementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Employees’ exposure to such adverse, resource‐depleting work conditions, irrespective of their source, is a critical concern for HR professionals, because they can harm employees’ mental well‐being, work motivation, and performance (e.g., Kumarika Perera, Chew and Nielsen 2017; Macky and Boxall 2008; Magee et al. 2017).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Expatriation is the traditional form of IA, which is defined as the transfer of parent country employees to foreign subsidiaries, usually between 1-3 years (Harzing, Pudelko and Reiche, 2015). More recently, there has been a significant rise in the increase of expatriate failures, which are generally a result of insufficient organisational support such as inappropriate selection or cross-cultural preparation (Kumarika et al 2017;Mayrhofer and Reiche, 2014). To avoid the costs involved with training and supporting expatriates, firms are now increasingly deploying SIAs, defined generally as temporary transfers to an international subsidiary 'between one and twelve months duration' (Collings et al 2007).…”
Section: Theoretical Backgroundmentioning
confidence: 99%