Cultural Dimensions and Their Impact on International Human Resource Management

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Abstract

As global business operations intensify, the cultural fabric within which multinational enterprises (MNEs) function becomes an essential variable influencing organizational performance and employee outcomes. International Human Resource Management (IHRM) must therefore evolve to address the multiplicity of cultural logics embedded in global workplaces. This article re-examines Hofstede’s cultural dimensions not merely as static categories, but as heuristic tools that can inform nuanced HRM practices within diverse and evolving socio-cultural systems. We argue that effective HRM strategies require more than procedural awareness, they demand interpretive engagement with cultural meaning-making processes. Building on the foundational contributions of Dowling, Festing, and Engle (2017), this paper analyzes how each of Hofstede’s six dimensions; power distance, individualism vs. collectivism, uncertainty avoidance, masculinity vs. femininity, long-term vs. short-term orientation, and indulgence vs. restraint, translates into differentiated HR policies and expatriate management approaches. We further situate these dimensions within broader debates in organization theory about institutional pluralism, identity negotiation, and cultural reflexivity. Rather than offering prescriptive formulas, the chapter advocates for an adaptive, context-sensitive model of IHRM, one that leverages cultural complexity as a strategic asset rather than a liability. Ultimately, our goal is to move the discourse beyond mere typologies of national culture toward a dynamic understanding of how cultural expectations shape organizational practices across levels of analysis. This shift has profound implications for HR professionals tasked with designing inclusive workplace structures, aligning global talent management with local expectations, and navigating leadership development in culturally heterogeneous environments. The article concludes by outlining a forward-looking research agenda that encourages critical engagement with culture in both theory and practice.

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