Lecture 08: People & Organisations London Metropolitan University MBA Programme || Module Number: MN7181 || Lecturer: Mr Laleen Katagodage || E-Soft batch-14-The Global Context for HRM
Global Context for HRM
(Cited with https://www.enotes.com/homework-help/list-advantages-disadvantages-globalization-list-113517. Accessed 20 Sep. 2018.)
There are a lot of people
are talking about globalization, many of whom have strong and often conflicting
views about the subject. Some authors see globalization as a rather positive
thing in the meaning of the consumer society and benefit to shoppers of more
things to buy and services to get in Western world. Other authors and many
non-governmental organizations like Third World Network are much more critical,
seeing globalization as colonization of the developing world. In words of Lee
and Collins, (2005). Globalization is seen as a complicated process, focusing
on how events, decisions and activities in one part of the world can have consequences
in other parts of the world.
What is Globalization
The globalization is defined by Held,
et al (1999). a process powered by, and resulting in, increasing cross-border
flows of
- · Goods
- · Services
- · Money
- · People
- · Information
- · Culture
Sociologist Anthony Giddens (1990,
p. 64, 1991, p. 21) proposes to regard globalization as a decoupling or “dissociation”
between space and time,
While geographer David Harvey (1989)
and political scientist James Mittelman (1996) observe that globalization
entails a “compression” of space and time, a shrinking of the world.
Sociologist Manuel Castells (1996,
p. 92) emphasizes the informational aspects of the global economy when he
defines it as “an economy with the capacity to work as a unit in real time on a
planetary scale.”
In a Simi-lar vein, sociologist Gary
Gereffi (1994) writes about global “commodity chains,” where by production is
coordinated on a global scale.
Management scholar Stephen Kobrin
(1997, pp. 147–148) describes globalization as driven not by foreign trade and
investment but by increasing technological scale and information flows.
The most common opinion
of globalization is internationalization. "Global" is described as
cross-border relations between countries, and "globalization" incomes
a growth of international exchange and interdependence. "Globalization"
is found in enlarged movements between countries of people, money, investments,
deseases, pollutants, messages, ideas etc. (Scholte, 2005).
Advantages
and Disadvantages of Globalization
"List the advantages and
disadvantages of globalization. List answers, not lengthy paragraphs,
please." eNotes, 10 Nov. 2009,
Advantages
|
Disadvantages
|
· Increase in employment opportunities
|
·Environmental degradation
|
· Education
|
· Unfair working conditions
|
· Increase in free trade
|
· Fall in employment growth rate
|
· Faster flow of Information
|
· Growing disparity among the
rich and the poor
|
· Increase in quality of goods and services
|
· Small scale industries face
extinction
|
· Decrease in prices of goods and services
|
· Rapid spread of deadly diseases
|
· Reduction in cultural barriers
|
(Cited with https://www.enotes.com/homework-help/list-advantages-disadvantages-globalization-list-113517. Accessed 20 Sep. 2018.)
Different
streams and looks on Globalization
There are two branches of interest in
globalization some are interested and some not i.e. the pro-globalization lobby
argues that globalization brings about much increased opportunities for almost
everyone, and increased competition is a good thing since it makes agents of
production more efficient. But the other ones i.e. the anti-globalization group
argues that certain groups of people who are deprived in terms of resources are
not currently capable of functioning within the increased competitive pressure
that will be brought about by allowing their economies to be more connected to
the rest of the world (investor word, 2005). The results have enlarged profits
for investors but offered pittances to laborers, provoking a strong backlash
from civil society. This page analyzes economic globalization and examines how
it might be resisted or regulated to promote sustainable development (Global
Policy.org, 2005).
The impact of globalization on HRM
is as follows:
·
Managing
Cultural Diversity
·
Managing
Expatriates
·
Difference
in the Employment Laws
·
Managing
Outsourcing of employees.
·
Managing
virtual employees
·
Corporate
Social Responsibility
·
Coping
with flexible working hours
·
Evolution
of more part-time and temporary work (especially among women, the elderly and
students
·
Coping up
with emerging technologies & quality measures
·
Changing
perspective from subordinates to business partners
Globalization
in the contemporary
Industrial
emergence of worldwide production markets and broader access to a range of
foreign products for consumers and companies has increased a lot during the globalization
process (Politzer, 2008).
Globalization and culture
Technology
has now created the possibility and even the likelihood of a global culture.
The Internet, fax machines, satellites, and cable TV are sweeping away cultural
boundaries. Global entertainment companies shape the perceptions and dreams of
ordinary citizens, wherever they live. This spread of values, norms, and culture
tends to promote Western ideals of capitalism. Will local cultures inevitably
fall victim to this global "consumer" culture? Will English eradicate
all other languages? Will consumer values overwhelm peoples' sense of community
and social solidarity? Or, on the contrary, will a common culture lead the way
to greater shared values and political unity? This section looks at these and
other issues of culture and globalization (Global Policy, 2009).
Dimension of IHRM:
According
to Morgan, P.V (1986) IHRM is the interplay among 3 dimensions:
- · HR Activities
- · Types of employees
- · Types of Countries
Purpose
of IHRM is to enable the firm /, the multinational corporations and companies to
be a successful globally.
Conclusion
The
global social justice movement, itself a product of globalization, proposes an
alternative path, more responsive to public needs (Global Policy Forum, 2011). Advances
in communication and transportation technology, combined with free market
ideology, have given goods, services, and capital unprecedented mobility. The use
international financial institutions and regional trade agreements to compel
poor countries to "integrate" by reducing tariffs, privatizing state
enterprises, and relaxing environmental and labor standards (Global Policy.org,
2005).
Reference:
Castells, M. (1996). The Rise of the Network Society.
Cambridge, MA: Blackwell
Lee, K. and Collin, J. (2005). Global Change and Health.
London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine. Open University Press.
Giddens A. (1990). The Consequences of Modernity.
Stanford, CA: Stanford Univ. Press
Giddens A. (1991). Modernity and Self-Identity. Cambridge,
MA: Polit
Gereffi, G. (1994). The organization of buyer-driven global
commodity chains. In Commodity Chains
and Global Capitalism, ed. G Gereffi, M Korzeniewicz, pp. 95–122. West-ort, CT:
Greenwood
Global Policy Forum, (2011),
available online
Global Policy, 2009, globalization of
culture, available online at: http://www.globalpolicy.org/globalization/globalization-of-culture.html
Global Policy.org, 2005,
globalization of the economy. Available online at:
Harvey, D. (1989). The Condition of
Postmodernity. Oxford: Blackwell
Held, at all., (1999). Global Transformations. Stanford,CA: Stanford Univ.
Press
Kobrin, S.J. (1997). The
architecture of globalization: state
sovereignty in a
networked
global economy. In Governments, Globalization,
and International Business, ed. JH Dunning, pp. 146–71. New York: Oxford Univ. Press
Mittelman, J.H. (1996). The
dynamics of globalization. In Globalization: Critical
Reflections, ed. J.H Mittelman, pp. 1–19. Boulder, CO: Lynne Rienner
Morgan,P.V, (1986) ‘International
Human Resource Management: Fact or Fiction’, Personnel Administrator, Vol 31,
No. 9 (1986), pp. 43–7.
Politzer, M. (2008) "China and
Africa: Stronger Economic Ties Mean More
Migration". By Malia
Politzer, Migration Information
Source. August 2008.
Scholte, J.A. (2005).
Globalization: a critical introduction. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.
Bibliographical
Reference
Globalization in the 21st century:
labor, capital, and the state on a world scale. Edited by Berch Berberoglu.
(2010). New York: Palgrave Macmillan.


Pls revisit yr article... and re-fwd with more academic materials with relevant references pls.
ReplyDeleteSir, as advised i have revised the article please check and comment.
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