
Management Faculty Publications and Presentations
Expatriate knowledge utilization and MNE performance: A multilevel framework
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
12-2014
Abstract
We present a multilevel conceptual framework of expatriate knowledge utilization. Drawing from the resource-based view and multilevel approaches to expatriate utilization, we describe how individual expatriate characteristics (task-related and intercultural competencies, and motivation to transfer knowledge) and international adjustment, as well as subsidiary characteristics (absorptive capacity and knowledge sustainability) influence knowledge transfer effectiveness. We also draw from outward knowledge transfer and expatriate learning perspectives to address the cyclical nature of the process. As such, we include the effect of expatriate learning not only in continued knowledge flows to the subsidiary, but also in knowledge flows to the home division. We offer several implications for research on practice, including the notion that knowledge transfer to the subsidiary should continue upon repatriation, and that outward knowledge transfer can begin before repatriation. The framework reiterates that expatriates are valuable human capital and a source of sustained competitive advantage to the MNE.
Recommended Citation
Gonzalez, J.A. and Chakraborty, S., 2014. Expatriate knowledge utilization and MNE performance: A multilevel framework. Human Resource Management Review, 24(4), pp.299-312. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.hrmr.2014.03.001
Publication Title
Human Resource Management Review
DOI
10.1016/j.hrmr.2014.03.001
Comments
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