新兴市场对非洲的外国直接投资:人力资源管理背景

Foreign Direct Investment from Emerging Markets to Africa: The HRM Context

HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT · 2014
被引 39
人大 AFT50

中文导读

研究了新兴市场跨国公司投资非洲时,东道国工资、本地能力、产权等因素对决策的影响,发现低工资和技能缺口不构成障碍,但依赖低薪和外来员工带来人力资源管理挑战。

Abstract

Abstract In this article, we explore what determines the decisions of emerging‐market multinational corporations (MNCs) to invest in Africa and whether this is any different from their counterparts in mature markets, focusing on the HRM context. More specifically, we explore the effect of potential host‐country wages, local capabilities, and the relative rights of owners versus workers on foreign direct investment (FDI) decisions, as well as other relevant factors such as mineral resources and corruption. We found that emerging‐market MNCs were not deterred by relatively weak property owner rights (as indeed, was also the case for their counterparts from mature markets); hence, any weakening of countervailing worker rights is unlikely to unlock significant new FDI. However, emerging‐market MNCs were more likely to invest in low‐wage economies and did not appear to be concerned by local skills gaps; the latter would reflect the relative de facto ease with which even partially skilled expatriate labor can be imported into many African countries. At the same time, a reliance on low‐wage, unskilled labor, coupled with the extensive usage of expatriates, brings with it a wide range of challenges for the HR manager, which a firm committed to cost‐cutting may lack the capabilities to resolve. © 2014 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

外国直接投资新兴市场跨国公司人力资源管理非洲经济