Work-life issues are a substantial concern for managers and employees in many multinational corporations (MNCs), as there are many challenges related to the need for MNCs to balance global policy guidelines with responsiveness to regional and local differences. Drawing on recent empirical advances, we offer a framework and a set of broad research questions to guide future scholarship in work-life management in MNCs. The framework identifies important external and organisational factors that influence the HRM function and specifically work-life policies and practices, in MNCs. Employee responses to work-life practices are proposed to mediate the relationship with the organisation's social and financial performance. Avenues for future research are discussed.
Keywords Environmental dynamism • Human resource management processes • Multinational corporations • Organisational performance • Work-life managementMany managers in multinational corporations (MNCs) face challenges related to the often-competing pressures for global integration and local responsiveness. On one hand, there are efficiencies to be gained by global co-ordination and consistency of policies; on the other hand, local differences such as social and institutional variations create pressures for responsiveness (Doz and Prahalad 1991;Sparrow 2012). Achieving an effective balance between global and local pressures enables MNCs to integrate units into a cohesive, global organisation and maximise local responsiveness (Venaik et al. 2004). Recent arguments for regionalisation (e.g., Edwards et al. 2012;Rugman et al. 2011) suggest even more complexity and tension related to competing pressures at multiple levels, perhaps global, local and regional. We suggest that work-life management in MNCs provides an excellent case for analysis of the way in which MNCs manage these competing pressures