Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Human Resource Management in China
View through CrossRef
The concept of human resource management (HRM) in China was only adopted beginning in the 1990s as a foreign import. Many domestic firms still operate in a traditional personnel management mode with limited strategic planning or HR capability, although there is a general trend by which firms are increasingly becoming more strategic in their HRM. In state-owned firms, the HR department acts mainly as the implementer of HR policies formulated and imposed by the state (employer). In domestic private firms, HR managers often play the role of administrator, following instructions from the boss. Indeed, lack of professional management is often a criticism about Chinese family-owned businesses, in which the owners run the business and make all the decisions with little consultation of those who work for the firm. It is in the foreign-funded multinational corporations (MNCs) that HRM is considered to be most systematic and sophisticated, resembling that of Western practices. Chinese culture plays a fundamental role in the management of workplace relationships. Paternalism and collectivism are seen as distinctive cultural characteristics that influence the way people behave and are managed at work. However, work ethics and expectations have changed as China develops economically and has become more open to the influence of foreign cultures, aided by information communication technology, and as the majority of the younger generation of the Chinese urban workforce are the “only-child” of the family as a result of the one-child policy enforced by the government from 1980 until the 2010s to curb population growth. Young employees are more eager to succeed, less willing to endure hardship, more assertive of their rights and interests, and less loyal to their employers, as evidenced by the high level of staff turnover. Equally, employers have become more cost-oriented, in part to deal with heightened competitive pressures. This is in part reflected in the work intensity (measured by pressure at work and long working hours) and the growing use of nonstandard employment characterized by the absence of job security, reduced social security, and the lack of career development opportunities. As marketization deepens, wealth disparity increases, and workplace relationships become more transactional in nature, the relationship between labor and capital/management has worsened in many workplaces, leading to a rising level of labor disputes. The understanding of people management at workplaces, therefore, needs to be situated in the broader context of employment relations, including the respective role, power base, and level of bargaining power of key institutional actors such as the state, employers and employer associations, and workers and their representing bodies like the trade unions. It is with this objective in mind that this bibliography of HRM in China has been compiled, taking into account aspects of functional and strategic HRM at the firm level, organizational behavior (OB) at the individual level, and workplace relationships collectively, with relevance to HRM. This broadened approach to contemplating HRM is an attempt to address the growing imbalance in HRM research that has been heavily skewed toward quantitative studies of individual behavior at the expense of in-depth studies of actions and interactions of socials groups in specific organizational settings.
Title: Human Resource Management in China
Description:
The concept of human resource management (HRM) in China was only adopted beginning in the 1990s as a foreign import.
Many domestic firms still operate in a traditional personnel management mode with limited strategic planning or HR capability, although there is a general trend by which firms are increasingly becoming more strategic in their HRM.
In state-owned firms, the HR department acts mainly as the implementer of HR policies formulated and imposed by the state (employer).
In domestic private firms, HR managers often play the role of administrator, following instructions from the boss.
Indeed, lack of professional management is often a criticism about Chinese family-owned businesses, in which the owners run the business and make all the decisions with little consultation of those who work for the firm.
It is in the foreign-funded multinational corporations (MNCs) that HRM is considered to be most systematic and sophisticated, resembling that of Western practices.
Chinese culture plays a fundamental role in the management of workplace relationships.
Paternalism and collectivism are seen as distinctive cultural characteristics that influence the way people behave and are managed at work.
However, work ethics and expectations have changed as China develops economically and has become more open to the influence of foreign cultures, aided by information communication technology, and as the majority of the younger generation of the Chinese urban workforce are the “only-child” of the family as a result of the one-child policy enforced by the government from 1980 until the 2010s to curb population growth.
Young employees are more eager to succeed, less willing to endure hardship, more assertive of their rights and interests, and less loyal to their employers, as evidenced by the high level of staff turnover.
Equally, employers have become more cost-oriented, in part to deal with heightened competitive pressures.
This is in part reflected in the work intensity (measured by pressure at work and long working hours) and the growing use of nonstandard employment characterized by the absence of job security, reduced social security, and the lack of career development opportunities.
As marketization deepens, wealth disparity increases, and workplace relationships become more transactional in nature, the relationship between labor and capital/management has worsened in many workplaces, leading to a rising level of labor disputes.
The understanding of people management at workplaces, therefore, needs to be situated in the broader context of employment relations, including the respective role, power base, and level of bargaining power of key institutional actors such as the state, employers and employer associations, and workers and their representing bodies like the trade unions.
It is with this objective in mind that this bibliography of HRM in China has been compiled, taking into account aspects of functional and strategic HRM at the firm level, organizational behavior (OB) at the individual level, and workplace relationships collectively, with relevance to HRM.
This broadened approach to contemplating HRM is an attempt to address the growing imbalance in HRM research that has been heavily skewed toward quantitative studies of individual behavior at the expense of in-depth studies of actions and interactions of socials groups in specific organizational settings.
Related Results
Equestrian: Horse sport development and cooperation between horses and humans
Equestrian: Horse sport development and cooperation between horses and humans
One of the most important industries in China’s history has been the horse industry, and the modern horse industry is still in the process of being transformed. When the horse busi...
China's Practices in Human Rights
China's Practices in Human Rights
Human rights used to be a sensitive topic in China. Before 1991, the Chinese government rarely took the initiative to participate in the formulation of international human rights r...
LIFE SKILL-BASED LEARNING MANAGEMENT AT STATE VOCATIONAL HIGH SCHOOL (SMKN) 3 SAMARINDA
LIFE SKILL-BASED LEARNING MANAGEMENT AT STATE VOCATIONAL HIGH SCHOOL (SMKN) 3 SAMARINDA
This research is based on the following problems: (1) How can life skills-based learning management improve the quality of graduates of SMKN 3 Samarinda? (2) What is the role of mo...
RESOURCES MANAGEMENT FOR ECONOMICS SUSTAINABILITY: A RE-READING OF EXODUS 16:16-20 AND CLOSE EXAMINATION OF SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT GOAL (SDG) #12
RESOURCES MANAGEMENT FOR ECONOMICS SUSTAINABILITY: A RE-READING OF EXODUS 16:16-20 AND CLOSE EXAMINATION OF SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT GOAL (SDG) #12
Effective resource management is crucial for achieving long-term economic sustainability, especially in balancing human needs with environmental preservation for future generations...
Determination of Green Human Resource Management: Analysis of Green Knowledge Sharing, Green Competitive Advantage, Green Training, Green Psychological Climate and Green Innovation
Determination of Green Human Resource Management: Analysis of Green Knowledge Sharing, Green Competitive Advantage, Green Training, Green Psychological Climate and Green Innovation
The purpose of this literature research is expected to help hypotheses for future authors in determining research related to green human resource management. The research article D...
Research on the Coupling Mechanism of the Trade Union and Human Resource Management in China
Research on the Coupling Mechanism of the Trade Union and Human Resource Management in China
With the reform of trade unions in China, there has been a noticeable interaction in recent years between trade unions and human resource management in the workplace. However, we d...
EMPLOYABILITY IN BFSI SECTOR - A STUDY OF MANAGEMENT GRADUATES IN BANGALORE
EMPLOYABILITY IN BFSI SECTOR - A STUDY OF MANAGEMENT GRADUATES IN BANGALORE
Management Education in India is more than half a century old. In the last twenty years, the growth of management education in India has been phenomenal. Students look at managemen...
Electronic human resource management and its impact on talent management in the Jordanian Universities
Electronic human resource management and its impact on talent management in the Jordanian Universities
Background
Talent management plays an essential role as part of the HRM function in managing all employees, resulting in high performance. The role of human resources m...

