To read this content please select one of the options below:

Multinational firms as emissaries of decent work: worker responses to progressive HRM in a foreign retailer in Japan

Ödül Bozkurt (Department of Management, University of Sussex, Brighton, UK)
Chul Chung (Henley Business School, University of Reading, Reading, UK)
Norifumi Kawai (Department of Management, University of Bergamo, Bergamo, Italy)
Motoko Honda-Howard (Department of Psychology, Showa Women's University, Tokyo, Japan)

Critical Perspectives on International Business

ISSN: 1742-2043

Article publication date: 20 February 2024

Issue publication date: 30 April 2024

60

Abstract

Purpose

The paper aims to provide an understanding of how the transfer of progressive human resource management (HRM) practices may or may fail to render multinational enterprises (MNEs) institutional entrepreneurs creating change in job quality and decent work to underprivileged workers in the low-pay retail sector in Japan.

Design/methodology/approach

The paper draws on survey questionnaire data and interviews with workers and management in a foreign retailer in Japan.

Findings

The findings suggest that even where MNEs may provide some measurable material improvements in job quality, in this case equal pay for equal work, the total outcomes are nevertheless shaped by institutional context and constraints. In this case, the improvement in pay was intertwined with flexibility demands that were possible to meet for some workers but not others. In particular, women with care responsibilities and competing demands on their time were not able to experience “decent work” in the same way as others.

Research limitations/implications

The study had a relatively low response rate, due to lack of discretion over time experienced by workers in Japan, as well as limited data on program outcomes, with interviews conducted with a small number of participants.

Practical implications

The study suggests that spaces and opportunities exist for MNEs to diverge from dominant practices in given host country locations and exercise a level of agency as emissaries of decent work but successful outcomes require a very thorough understanding of individual worker experiences within the institutional constraints of given environments.

Social implications

The study offers insights into the complexities of initiatives by MNEs to contribute to the provision of decent work, particularly for workers in underprivileged positions including women in low-pay sectors such as retail, as firm-level practices lead to variable outcomes when filtered through local institutions.

Originality/value

The study brings together a focus on firm-level practices that inform much of the international HRM and international management scholarship with an emphasis on the experiences of workers, which is pursued in the sociology of work, to investigate whether MNEs can be actors in the realising of the Sustainable Development Goals around decent work.

Keywords

Citation

Bozkurt, Ö., Chung, C., Kawai, N. and Honda-Howard, M. (2024), "Multinational firms as emissaries of decent work: worker responses to progressive HRM in a foreign retailer in Japan", Critical Perspectives on International Business, Vol. 20 No. 2, pp. 225-245. https://doi.org/10.1108/cpoib-12-2022-0131

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2024, Emerald Publishing Limited

Related articles