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The impact of expatriate supporting practices and cultural intelligence on cross-cultural adjustment and performance of expatriates in Singapore

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journal contribution
posted on 2022-10-05, 20:21 authored by PC Wu, Siah AngSiah Ang
We test the relationships between corporate expatriate supporting practices, cross- cultural adjustment, and expatriate performance. Specifically, we propose that the facets of cultural intelligence moderate the expatriate supporting practices-expatriate adjustment relationship. Analyzing 169 expatriates residing in Singapore, we found that expatriate supporting practices were positively related to adjustment as well as performance. Further, we demonstrated that metacognitive and cognitive cultural intelligence negatively moderated the links between expatriate supporting practices and adjustment, while motivational cultural intelligence had a positive moderating effect. These findings have implications for organizations providing support for expatriates and the expatriate selection and training processes. © 2011 Taylor & Francis.

History

Preferred citation

Wu, P. C. & Ang, S. H. (2011). The impact of expatriate supporting practices and cultural intelligence on cross-cultural adjustment and performance of expatriates in Singapore. International Journal of Human Resource Management, 22(13), 2683-2702. https://doi.org/10.1080/09585192.2011.599956

Journal title

International Journal of Human Resource Management

Volume

22

Issue

13

Publication date

2011-08-01

Pagination

2683-2702

Publisher

Informa UK Limited

Publication status

Published

ISSN

0958-5192

eISSN

1466-4399

Language

en