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Showing papers by "Markus Pudelko published in 2011"


Journal ArticleDOI
15 May 2011
TL;DR: In this article, the degree of conflict between different groups of employees in MNC subsidiaries in relation to different home-host country combinations was investigated and it was found that expected conflicts, due to substantial cultural differences, induce employees to actively counteract such problems, leading ultimately to a reduction of real conflicts.
Abstract: This article investigates the degree of conflict between different groups of employees in MNC subsidiaries in relation to different home-host country combinations. More specifically, we compared the degree of conflict of Western subsidiaries in Japan and Japanese subsidiaries in the West. We based our comprehensive investigation on data from 617 US and German subsidiaries in Japan as well as Japanese subsidiaries in the USA and Germany (and, for comparative reasons, US subsidiaries in Germany and German subsidiaries in the US). Possibly rather surprisingly, our results indicate that different degrees of cultural distance between home and host country do not lead to different degrees of conflict in MNC subsidiaries. We suggest that expected conflicts, due to substantial cultural differences, induce employees to actively counteract such problems, leading ultimately to a reduction of real conflicts. Furthermore, while previous literature suggested that in particular Japanese subsidiaries in the West are prone to a high degree of conflicts, our findings suggest that Western subsidiaries in Japan are even more conflict-laden. This should caution Western companies against complacency when operating in Japan.

6 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
01 Jan 2011
TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the importance of culturally and institutionally induced conflicts between home and host country nationals in foreign subsidiaries of multinational corporations (MNCs) and found that cultural sources have a higher conflict potential compared to institutional sources.
Abstract: This paper investigates the importance of culturally and institutionally induced conflicts between home and host country nationals in foreign subsidiaries of multinational corporations (MNCs). our comprehensive investigation of 617 foreign subsidiaries of US, Japanese and german multinationals firstly demonstrates that subsidiary managers attribute such conflicts to both cultural and institutional sources. We also find that cultural sources have a higher conflict potential compared to institutional sources. Further, we demonstrate that with increasing cultural and institutional distances between home and host countries, culturally induced conflicts become relatively more important than institutionally induced conflicts. these results indicate that although institutional differences matter as sources of conflicts between home and host country nationals in foreign subsidiaries, cultural differences matter somewhat more. nevertheless, the paper stresses that both, cultural and institutional sources of conflicts should be considered in conjunction and in an integrative way.

3 citations