High-performance work systems and organizational performance across societal cultures

Ali Dastmalchian, Nick Bacon, Nicola McNeil, Claudia Steinke, Paul Blyton, Medha Satish Kumar, Secil Bayraktar, Werner Auer-Rizzi, Ali Ahmad, Tim Craig, Che Ruhana Binti Isa Ghazali Bin Musa, Mohammad Habibi, Heh Jason Huang, Pinar Imer, Ismail Ayman, Hayat Kabasakal, Carlotta Meo Colombo, Sedigeh Moghavami, Tuheena Mukherjee, Ningyu TangThi Nam Thang, Renin N. Varnali

Research output: Contribution to journalConference articlepeer-review

2 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

This paper assesses whether societal culture affects the relationship between human resource management practices and organizational performance. Drawing on matched employer-employee data from 387 organizations and 7,187 employees in 14 countries, the findings show a positive relationship between high-performance work systems (HPWS) and organizational performance across societal cultures. This relationship was not moderated by three dimensions of societal culture (power distance, in-group collectivism, and institutional collectivism) as proposed by contingency models of culture fit. However, further examination of three dimensions of human resource systems (skill-enhancing, motivation-enhancing, and opportunity-enhancing practices) revealed that opportunity-enhancing practices appear less effective in high power distance cultures. The findings provide general support for the universalistic ‘best practice’ perspective with regard to the positive relationship between HPWS and organizational performance, tempered by an appreciation of the limitations to opportunity-enhancing practices in high power distance cultures.

Original languageEnglish
JournalAcademy of Management Annual Meeting Proceedings
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2018
Event78th Annual Meeting of the Academy of Management, AOM 2018 - Chicago, United States
Duration: 10 Aug 201814 Aug 2018

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'High-performance work systems and organizational performance across societal cultures'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this