Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-p9bg8 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-25T05:37:45.143Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Adaptation of Compensation Practice in China: The Role of Sub-National Institutions

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  31 May 2019

Wei Lu*
Affiliation:
Aalto University, School of Business, Finland
Ayse Saka-Helmhout
Affiliation:
Radboud University, The Netherlands
Rebecca Piekkari
Affiliation:
Aalto University, School of Business, Finland
*
Corresponding author: Wei Lu ([email protected])

Abstract

Unlike previous research that has largely focused on the influence of national institutions on human resource management practices in China, our study taps into the role of sub-national institutions. We demonstrate, via a qualitative configurational analysis, that foreign subsidiaries of multinational corporations still adapt HQ compensation practice to the local context despite low regulatory pressure and low mobility of skills at the sub-national level. This adaptation is facilitated by a decentralized structure in the multinational corporation. Our study also shows that high regulatory pressure and high portability of skills at the sub-national level alone are sufficient to induce local adaptation of compensation practice. Our explanation points to the significant role played by sub-national institutions in large and rapidly changing emerging economies and contributes to research on local adaptation of HRM practice in China. It offers an insight into forms of institutional agency by political and economic actors at local levels of governance as they attempt to influence the skills and human resources available for MNCs through regulatory means.

摘要

以往对中国人力资源管理实践的研究侧重于国家制度的影响,我们的研究则探讨中国地方制度的作用。我们通过定性的构型分析表明,即使在宽松的地方法规和技能流动性低的环境下,跨国公司的外国子公司仍然调整薪酬政策以适应当地的情况。跨国公司的分权结构促进了这种适应性。我们的研究还表明,在严格的地方法规和技能流动性高并存的情况下,跨国公司的外国子公司也会调整薪酬政策以适应当地情况。我们的解释指出了地方制度在大型且快速变化的新兴经济体中所发挥的重要作用,并有助于研究跨国公司人力资源管理实践在中国的适应性。本文揭示了地方层面政治和经济行动主体所形成的体制机构以地方法规为手段,影响跨国公司对技能和人力资源的获取。

Аннотация

В отличие от предыдущих исследований, где основное внимание уделялось влиянию национальных учреждений на методы управления персоналом в Китае, наша работа посвящена роли субнациональных учреждений. На основе качественного структурного анализа, мы демонстрируем, что иностранные дочерние компании многонациональных корпораций по-прежнему адаптируют корпоративную практику компенсации к местным условиям, несмотря на незначительное давление со стороны регулирующих органов и низкую мобильность трудовых ресурсов на субнациональном уровне. Этой адаптации способствует децентрализованная структура в многонациональной корпорации. Наше исследование также показывает, что сильное давление со стороны регулирующих органов и высокая мобильность трудовых ресурсов на субнациональном уровне являются достаточными условиями для стимулирования местной адаптации методов компенсации. Наши выводы указывают на значительную роль, которую играют субнациональные учреждения в крупных странах с быстро развивающейся экономикой, а также вносят вклад в исследования по местной адаптации методов управления человеческими ресурсами в Китае. Данная работа дает представление о формах институциональной деятельности политических и экономических субъектов на уровне местного управления, поскольку эти субъекты регулируют трудовые профессиональные ресурсы, доступные для многонациональных корпораций, посредством нормативно-правовых механизмов.

Resumen

A diferencia de investigaciones previas que han estado enfocadas en gran medida en la influencia de las instituciones nacionales en las prácticas de gestión de recursos humanos en China, nuestro estudio intenta sacarle provecho al papel de las instituciones subnacionales. Demostramos, a través de un análisis de configuración cualitativo, que las filiales extranjeras de las empresas multinacionales aún adaptan las prácticas de compensación de la casa matriz al contexto local pese a la baja presión regulatoria y la baja movilidad de habilidades a nivel subnacional. Esta adaptación está facilitada por una estructura descentralizada en la corporación multinacional. Nuestro estudio también muestra que una alta presión regulatoria y una alta portabilidad de habilidades a nivel subnacional solamente son suficientes para inducir una adaptación local de la práctica de compensación. Nuestra explicación apunta al importante papel jugado por las instituciones subnacionales en las economías emergentes rápidamente cambiantes y contribuye a la investigación sobre la adaptación local de las prácticas de gestión de recursos humanos en China. Ofrece una idea sobre las formas de agencia institucional por parte de actores políticos y económicos en los niveles locales de gobierno ya que estos intentna influir las habilidades y recursos humanos disponibles para empresas multinacionales a través de medidas regulatorias.

Type
Special Issue Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The International Association for Chinese Management Research 2019 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

Footnotes

Accepted by: Guest Editor Emmanuella Plakoyiannaki

References

REFERENCES

Agmon, T., & Kindleberger, C. P. 1977. Multinationals from small countries. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.Google Scholar
Aguilera, R., & Jackson, G. 2003. The cross-national diversity of corporate governance: Dimensions and determinants. Academy of Management Review, 28(3): 447465.Google Scholar
Aguzzoli, R., & Geary, J. 2014. An ‘emerging challenge’: The employment practices of a Brazilian multinational company in Canada. Human Relations, 67(5): 587609.Google Scholar
Ajupov, A. A., Kurilova, A. A., & Efimova, E. A. 2015. Setting the minimum wage in the Russian federation regions. Mediterranean Journal of Social Sciences, 6(1S3): 3539.Google Scholar
Almond, P. 2011. The sub-national embeddedness of international HRM. Human Relations, 64(4): 531551.Google Scholar
Almond, P., Ferner, A., & Tregaskis, O. 2015. The changing context of regional governance of FDI in England. European Urban and Regional Studies, 22(1): 6176.Google Scholar
Almond, P., Gonzalez, M. C., Lavelle, J., & Murray, G. 2017. The local in the global: Regions, employment systems and multinationals. Industrial Relations Journal, 48(2): 115132.Google Scholar
Almond, P., Muller-Camen, M., Collings, D. G., & Quintanilla, J. 2006. Pay and performance. In Almand, P. & Ferner, A. (Eds.), American multinationals in Europe: Managing employment relations across national borders: 119171. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Asuyama, Y. 2009. Skill formation systems of China and India. In Ohara, M. & Kimura, K. (Eds.), Comparative study on industrial development process in China and India: 2776. Chiba, Japan: Institute of Development Economics.Google Scholar
Bartlett, C. A., & Ghoshal, S. 1989. Managing across borders: The transnational solution. Boston, MA: Harvard Business School Press.Google Scholar
Beugelsdijk, S., & Mudambi, R. 2013. MNEs as border-crossing multi-location enterprises: The role of discontinuities in geo-graphic space. Journal of International Business Studies, 44(5): 413426.Google Scholar
Björkman, I., & Lu, Y. 2001. Institutionalization and bargaining power explanations of HRM practices in international joint ventures – the case of Chinese-Western joint ventures. Organization Studies, 22(3): 491512.Google Scholar
Björkman, I., Fey, C. F., & Park, H. J. 2007. Institutional theory and MNC subsidiary HRM practices: Evidence from a three-country study. Journal of International Business Studies, 38(3): 430446.Google Scholar
Bloom, M., Milkovich, G., & Mitra, A. 2003. International compensation. Learning from how managers respond to variations in local host contexts. International Journal of Human Resource Management, 14(8): 13501367.Google Scholar
Buckley, J., & Casson, M. C. 1976. The future of the multinational enterprise. London, UK: Macmillan.Google Scholar
Chan, M. C., Makino, S., & Isobe, T. 2010. Does sub-national region matter? Foreign affiliate performance in the United States and China. Strategic Management Journal, 31(11): 12261242.Google Scholar
China National Bureau of Statistics. 2010. Available from URL: http://www.stats.gov.cn/tjsj/tjgb/rkpcgb/dfrkpcgb/index.htmlGoogle Scholar
Cooke, F. L. 2011. Employment relations in China. In Bamber, G., Lansbury, R. D., & Wailes, N. (Eds.), International and comparative employment relations: Globalisation and change. London, UK: SAGE Publications Ltd.Google Scholar
Conyon, M. J., & He, L. 2014. CEO turnover in China: The role of market-based and accounting performance measures. The European Journal of Finance, 20(7–9): 657680.Google Scholar
Cordeiro, J., He, L., Conyon, M., & Shaw, T. 2013. Informativeness of performance measures and Chinese executive compensation. Asia Pacific Journal of Management, 30(4): 10311058.Google Scholar
Crilly, D. 2011. Predicting stakeholder orientation in the multinational enterprise: A mid-range theory. Journal of International Business Studies, 42(5): 694717.Google Scholar
Culpepper, P. D., & Thelen, K. 2008. Institutions and collective actors in the provision of training: Historical and cross-national comparisons. In Mayer, K. U. (Ed.), Skill formation: Interdisciplinary and cross-national perspectives : 2149. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Das, M., & N'Diaye, P. 2013. The end of cheap labor. Finance & Development, 50(2): 3437.Google Scholar
Deephouse, D. L., & Suchman, M. C. 2008. Legitimacy in organizational institutionalism. In Greenwood, R., Oliver, C., Sahlin, K., & Suddaby, R. (Eds.), The Sage handbook of organizational institutionalism: 4977. Thousand Oaks, CA: SAGE Publications.10.4135/9781849200387.n2Google Scholar
Delbridge, R., Hauptmeier, M., & Sengupta, S. 2011. Beyond the enterprise: Broadening the horizons of international HRM. Human Relations, 64(4): 483505.Google Scholar
Delios, A., & Beamish, P. W. 1999. Ownership strategy of Japanese firms: Transaction, institutional and experience influences. Strategic Management Journal, 20(10): 915933.Google Scholar
DiMaggio, P. J., & Powell, W. W. 1983. The iron case revisited: Institutional isomorphism and collective rationality in organizational fields. American Sociological Review, 48(2): 147160.Google Scholar
Edwards, T., Edwards, P., Ferner, A., Marginson, P., & Tregaskis, O. 2010. Multinational companies and the diffusion of employment practices from outside the country of origin: Explaining variation across firms. Management International Review, 50(5): 613634.Google Scholar
Estevez-Abe, M., Iversen, T., & Soskice, D. 2001. A social protection and the formation of skills: A reinterpretation of the welfare state. In Hall, P. A. & Soskice, D. (Eds.), Varieties of capitalism: The institutional foundations of comparative advantage, 145183. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Estrin, S., Meyer, K. E., Wright, M., & Foliano, F. 2008. Export propensity and intensity of subsidiaries in emerging economies. International Business Review, 17(5): 574586.10.1016/j.ibusrev.2008.04.002Google Scholar
Fang, T., & Lin, C. 2015. Minimum wages and unemployment in China. IZA Journal of Labor Policy, 4: 22.Google Scholar
Farley, J. U., Hoenig, S., & Yang, J. Z. 2004. Key factors influencing HRM practices of overseas subsidiaries in China's transition economy. International Journal of Human Resource Management, 15(4/5): 688704.Google Scholar
Ferner, A., & Tempel, A. 2006. Multinationals and national business systems: A ‘power and institutions’ perspective. In Almond, P. & Ferner, A. (Eds.), American multinationals in Europe: Managing employment relations across national borders: 1034. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Festing, M., & Sahakiants, I. 2013. Path-dependent evolution of compensation systems in Central and Eastern Europe: A case study of multinational corporation subsidiaries in the Czech Republic, Poland and Hungary. European Management Journal, 31(4): 373389.Google Scholar
Festing, M., Eidems, J., & Royer, S. 2007. Strategic issues and local constraints in transnational compensation strategies: An analysis of cultural, institutional and political influences. European Management Journal, 25(2): 118131.10.1016/j.emj.2007.01.001Google Scholar
Fiss, P. C. 2009. Case studies and the configurational analysis of organizational phenomena. In Ragin, C. & Byrne, D. (Eds.), Handbook of case study methods: 424440. London: SAGE Publications.10.4135/9781446249413.n26Google Scholar
Fiss, P. C. 2011. Building better causal theories: A fuzzy set approach to typologies in organization research. Academy of Management Journal, 54(2): 393420.Google Scholar
Fletcher, M., & Plakoyiannaki, E. 2011. Case selection in international business: Key issues and common misconceptions. In Piekkari, R. & Welch, C. (Eds.), Rethinking the case study in international business and management research: 171191. Cheltenham, UK: Edward Elgar.Google Scholar
Fortwengel, J. 2017. Understanding when MNCs can overcome institutional distance: A research agenda. Management International Review, 57(6): 793814.Google Scholar
Freeman, J. H., & Audia, P. G. 2006. Community ecology and the sociology of organizations. Annual Review of Sociology, 32: 145169.Google Scholar
Gallie, D. 2007. Production regimes and the quality of employment in Europe. Annual Review of Sociology, 33: 85104.Google Scholar
Gamble, J. 2003. Transferring human resource practices from the United Kingdom to China: The limits and potential for convergence. The International Journal of Human Resource Management, 14(3): 369387.Google Scholar
Gan, L., Hernandez, M. A., & Ma, S. 2016. The higher costs of doing business in China: Minimum wages and firms' export behavior. Journal of International Economics, 100: 8194.Google Scholar
Ghauri, P. 1992. New structures in MNCs based in small countries: A network approach. European Management Journal, 10(3): 357364.Google Scholar
Grandori, A., & Furnari, S. 2013. Configurational analysis and organization design: Towards a theory of structural heterogeneity. In Fiss, P. C., Marx, A., & Cambre, B., (Eds.), Configurational theory and methods in organizational research: Research in the sociology of organizations, 38: 77105. Bingley, UK: Emerald Group Publishing.Google Scholar
Greenwood, R., Díaz, A. M., Li, S. X., & Lorente, J. C. 2010. The multiplicity of institutional logics and the heterogeneity of organizational responses. Organization Science, 21(2): 521539.Google Scholar
Güler, I., Guillén, M. F., & Macpherson, J. M. 2002. Global competition, institutions, and the diffusion of organizational practices: The international spread of ISO9000 quality certificates. Administrative Science Quarterly, 47(2): 207232.Google Scholar
Haepp, T., & Lin, C. 2017. How does the minimum wage affect firm investments in fixed and human capital? Evidence from China. Review of Development Economics, 21(4): 10571080.Google Scholar
Hall, P., & Soskice, D. 2001. Varieties of capitalism: The institutional foundations of comparative advantage. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
He, C. 2002. Information costs, agglomeration economies and the location of foreign direct investment in China. Regional Studies, 36(9): 10291036.Google Scholar
He, L., & Fang, J. 2016. Subnational institutional contingencies and executive pay dispersion. Asia Pacific Journal of Management, 33(2): 371410.Google Scholar
IMD World Talent Report. 2016. Available from URL: https://www.imd.org/globalassets/wcc/docs/talent_2016_web.pdfGoogle Scholar
Jackson, G., & Deeg, R. 2008. Comparing capitalisms: Understanding institutional diversity and its implications for international business. Journal of International Business Studies, 39(4): 540561.Google Scholar
Kettunen, E., Lintunen, J., Lu, W., & Kosonen, R. 2008. Suomalaisyritysten strategiat Kiinan muuttuvassa toimintaympäristössä (Translation in English: Finnish companies’ strategies in the changing business environment of China). Helsinki School of Economics Publications B-98.Google Scholar
Kilian, H. P., Schiller, D., & Kraas, F. 2012. Workplace quality and labor turnover in the electronics industry of the Pearl River Delta, China. Zeitschrift für Wirtschaftsgeographie, 56(1–2): 5879.Google Scholar
Knight, J., & Song, L. 2005. Towards a labor market in China. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Kwon, J.-W. 2012. Does China have more than one culture? Asia Pacific Journal of Management, 29(1): 79102.Google Scholar
Lu, W. 2014. Localisation of human resource management practices in China: A qualitative comparative analysis approach . Ph.D. dissertation. Aalto University publication series: Doctoral Dissertations 6/2014.Google Scholar
Luo, Y., Xue, Q., & Han, B. 2010. How emerging market governments promote outward FDI: Experience from China. Journal of World Business, 45(1): 6879.Google Scholar
Ma, X. F., Ding, Z. J., & Lin, Y. 2016. Subnational institutions, political capital, and the internationalization of entrepreneurial firms in emerging economies. Journal of World Business, 51(5): 843854.10.1016/j.jwb.2016.07.004Google Scholar
Ma, X., Tong, T. W., & Fitza, M. 2013. How much does sub-national region matter to foreign subsidiary performance? Evidence from Fortune Global 500 corporations’ investment in China. Journal of International Business Studies, 44(1): 6687.Google Scholar
Marín, G. S. 2008. National differences in compensation: The influence of institutional and cultural context. In Gomez-Mejia, L. R. & Werner, S. (Eds.), Global compensation: Foundations and perspectives. London and New York: Routledge.Google Scholar
Marschan-Piekkari, R., & Reis, C. 2004. Language and languages in cross-cultural interviewing. In Marschan-Piekkari, R. & Welch, C. (Eds.), Handbook of qualitative research methods for international business: 224226. Cheltenham, UK: Edward Elgar.Google Scholar
Martin, C. J. 2012. Political institutions and the origins of collective skill formation systems. In Busemeyer, M. R. & Trampusch, C. (Eds.), The political economy of collective skill formation: 4167. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Marx, A. 2006. Towards more robust model specification in QCA results from a methodological experiment. Working paper. COMPASSS WP Series 2006–43. Available from URL: http:\\www.compasss.org\wpseries\Marx2006.pdfGoogle Scholar
McGaughey, S. L., & de Cieri, H. 1999. Reassessment of convergence and divergence dynamics: Implications for international HRM. The International Journal of Human Resource Management, 10(2): 235250.10.1080/095851999340530Google Scholar
Meyer, K. E., & Nguyen, H. V. 2005. Foreign investment strategies and sub-national institutions in emerging markets: Evidence from Vietnam. Journal of Management Studies, 42(1): 6393.Google Scholar
Meyer, K. E., Estrin, S., Bhaumik, S. K., & Peng, M. W. 2009. Institutions, resources, and entry strategies in emerging economies. Strategic Management Journal, 30(1): 6180.Google Scholar
Michailova, S. 2004. Contextualizing field work: Reflections on conducting research in Eastern Europe. In Marschan-Piekkari, R. & Welch, C. (Eds.), Handbook of qualitative research methods for international business. Cheltenham, UK: Edward Elgar.Google Scholar
Monaghan, S. 2012. Attraction and retention of foreign direct investment (FDI): The role of subnational institutions in a small, highly globalised economy. Irish Journal of Management, 31(2): 4561.Google Scholar
Monaghan, S., Gunnigle, P., & Lavelle, J. 2014. ‘Courting the multinational’: Subnational institutional capacity and foreign market insidership. Journal of International Business Studies, 45(2): 131150.10.1057/jibs.2013.47Google Scholar
Myloni, B., Harzing, A.-W., & Mirza, H. 2004. Host country specific factors and the transfer of human resource management practices in multinational companies. International Journal of Manpower, 25(6): 518534.Google Scholar
Neumark, D., & Wascher, W. 2007. Minimum wages and employment. Foundations and trends in microeconomics, 3(1–2): 1182.Google Scholar
Nguyen, T. V., Le, N. T. B., & Bryant, S. E. 2013. Sub-national institutions, firm strategies, and firm performance: A multilevel study of private manufacturing firms in Vietnam. Journal of World Business, 48(1): 6876.Google Scholar
OECD. 2010. Vocational education and training in China: Strengths, challenges and policy options. Available from URL: http://www.oecd.org/education/skills-beyond-school/45494135.pdfGoogle Scholar
Peck, J., & Theodore, N. 2007. Flexible recession: The temporary staffing industry and mediated work in the United States. Cambridge Journal of Economics, 31(2): 171192.Google Scholar
People's Daily Online . 2011. China's higher education students exceed 30 million. Available from URL: http://en.people.cn/90001/98649/7315789.htmlGoogle Scholar
Phelps, N. A., MacKinnon, D., Stone, I., & Braidford, P. 2003. Embedding the multinationals? Institutions and the development of overseas manufacturing affiliates in Wales and North East England. Regional Studies, 37(1): 2740.Google Scholar
Prahalad, C. K., & Doz, Y. 1987. The multinational mission: Balancing local demands and global vision. New York: The Free Press.Google Scholar
Pudelko, M. A. 2005. Cross-national learning from best practice and the convergence-divergence debate in HRM. The International Journal of Human Resource Management, 16(11): 20452074.10.1080/09585190500314920Google Scholar
Pudelko, M. A., & Harzing, A.-W. 2007. Country-of-origin, localization or dominance effect? An empirical investigation of HRM practices in foreign subsidiaries. Human Resource Management, 46(4): 535559.10.1002/hrm.20181Google Scholar
Ragin, C. C. 2006. Set relations in social research: Evaluating their consistency and coverage. Political Analysis, 14(3): 291310.10.1093/pan/mpj019Google Scholar
Ragin, C. C. 2008. Redesigning social inquiry: Fuzzy sets and beyond. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Ragin, C. C. 2009. Qualitative comparative analysis using fuzzy sets (fsQCA). In Rihoux, B. & Ragin, C. C. (Eds.), Configurational comparative methods: Qualitative comparative analysis (qca) and related techniques: 87121. Los Angeles, CA: SAGE Publications.10.4135/9781452226569.n5Google Scholar
Ragin, C. C., & Davey, S. 2014. fs/QCA, Fuzzy-set/qualitative comparative analysis, version 2.5. Tucson, AZ: University of Arizona.Google Scholar
Ragin, C. C., & Fiss, P. C. 2008. Net effects versus configurations: An empirical demonstration. In Ragin, C. C. (Ed.), Redesigning social inquiry: 190212. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Rihoux, B., & Ragin, C. C. 2009. Configurational comparative methods: Qualitative comparative analysis (QCA) and related techniques. Los Angeles, CA: SAGE Publications.Google Scholar
Saka-Helmhout, A. 2011. Comparative historical analysis in international management research. In Piekkari, R. & Welch, C. (Eds.), Rethinking the case study in international business and management research: 383407. Cheltenham, UK: Edward Elgar.Google Scholar
Sanders, G. W., & Tuschke, A. 2007. The adoption of institutionally contested organizational practices: The emergence of stock options in Germany. Academy of Management Journal, 50(1): 3356.10.5465/amj.2007.24160889Google Scholar
Schmillen, A. D., & Packard, T. G. 2016. Vietnam's labor market institutions, regulations, and interventions. World Bank Group.Google Scholar
Schneider, C., & Wagemann, C. 2012. Set-theoretic methods for the social sciences: A guide to qualitative comparative analysis. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.10.1017/CBO9781139004244Google Scholar
Shi, W. S., Sun, S. L., & Peng, M. W. 2012. Sub-national institutional contingencies, network positions, and IJV partner selection. Journal of Management Studies, 49(7): 12211245.Google Scholar
Smolentseva, A. 2007. Educational inequality in Russia. In Teese, R., Lamb, S., & Duru-Bellat, M. (Eds.), International studies in educational inequality, theory and policy (Vol. 2) Education inequality: Persistence and Change: 143156. Dordrecht, The Netherlands: Springer Netherlands.Google Scholar
Spicer, A. 2006. Beyond the convergence-divergence debate: The role of spatial scales in transforming organizational logic. Organization Studies, 27(10): 14671483.Google Scholar
Tan, H., & Nojonen, M. 2011. Doing case studies in China: Two perspectives: Perspective No. 1: The Chinese researcher now living abroad. In Piekkari, R. & Welch, C. (Eds.), Rethinking the case study in international business and management research: 474484. Cheltenham, UK: Edward Elgar.Google Scholar
Taylor, S., Beechler, S., & Napier, N. 1996. Toward an integrated theory of international human resource management. Academy of Management Review, 21(4): 959985.Google Scholar
Thelen, K. 2004. How institutions evolve: The political economy of skills in Germany, Britain, the United States, and Japan. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Wang, J., & Gunderson, M. 2011. Minimum wage impacts in China: Estimates from a prescribed research design, 2000–2007. Contemporary Economic Policy, 29(3): 392406.10.1111/j.1465-7287.2010.00239.xGoogle Scholar
Wei, Y. D. 2001. Decentralization, marketization, and globalization: The triple processes underlying regional development in China. Asian Geographer, 20(1–2): 723.10.1080/10225706.2001.9684073Google Scholar
Whitley, R. 1999. The nature of business systems and their institutional structuring. In Whitley, R. (Ed.), Divergent capitalisms: The social structuring and change of business systems: 3164. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Williams, C., & van Triest, S. 2009. The impact of corporate and national cultures on decentralization in multinational corporations. International Business Review, 18(2): 156167.Google Scholar
Xian, H. P. 2008. Lost in translation? Language, culture and the roles of translator in cross-cultural management research. Qualitative Research in Organizations and Management: An International Journal. 3(3): 231245.10.1108/17465640810920304Google Scholar