Knowledge sharing behaviour of overqualified repatriates

Purpose Organizations send their employees for international assignments so as to develop their international working experiences, their global knowledge and skills. These employees are then expected to return to their home countries (hereof known as repatriates) to share their newly gained knowledg...

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Main Authors: Jayasingam, Sharmila, Chong, Maggie Mei Kei, Abu Bakar, Raida
Format: Article
Published: Emerald Group Publishing Ltd 2021
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Online Access:http://eprints.um.edu.my/35031/
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spelling my.um.eprints.350312022-08-29T01:36:38Z http://eprints.um.edu.my/35031/ Knowledge sharing behaviour of overqualified repatriates Jayasingam, Sharmila Chong, Maggie Mei Kei Abu Bakar, Raida HB Economic Theory HD28 Management. Industrial Management Business Purpose Organizations send their employees for international assignments so as to develop their international working experiences, their global knowledge and skills. These employees are then expected to return to their home countries (hereof known as repatriates) to share their newly gained knowledge or skills with their colleagues. This practice would benefit the organization's performance to some extent. Nonetheless, past literature had pointed out that many of such repatriates tend to leave their respective organizations as a result of not being able to fully utilize their newly acquired knowledge and skills, which led them to perceive that they were overqualified. This occurrence could lead to a loss of valuable knowledge for their organization. Aiming to address this issue at hand, the current study focuses on examining of the antecedents that could influence these repatriates' knowledge sharing behaviour. Design/methodology/approach This paper uses a research framework which was developed from three aspects of interest-perceived overqualification, affective commitment and the moderating effect of repatriation support practices on knowledge sharing behaviour of repatriates. Structural model analysis was carried out to assess 152 useable data which were collected from returning corporate repatriates in Malaysia. The SmartPLS 3.0 software was applied. Findings Repatriates with highly perceived overqualifications tend to exhibit low affective commitment. The impact of their perceived overqualification on knowledge sharing behaviour was fully mediated by their affective commitment. Repatriation support practice was found to strengthen the positive relationship between affective commitment and knowledge sharing behaviour. Originality/value The use of the relative deprivation theory showed that the outcome derived from this study could serve as an insight for organizations to understand how those repatriates' perception of overqualification influences their level of affective commitment, and subsequently, the extent to which they share knowledge upon returning. Emerald Group Publishing Ltd 2021-11-16 Article PeerReviewed Jayasingam, Sharmila and Chong, Maggie Mei Kei and Abu Bakar, Raida (2021) Knowledge sharing behaviour of overqualified repatriates. Journal of Global Mobility-the Home of Expatriate Management Research, 9 (4, SI). pp. 543-573. ISSN 2049-8799, DOI https://doi.org/10.1108/JGM-04-2021-0050 <https://doi.org/10.1108/JGM-04-2021-0050>. 10.1108/JGM-04-2021-0050
institution Universiti Malaya
building UM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Malaya
content_source UM Research Repository
url_provider http://eprints.um.edu.my/
topic HB Economic Theory
HD28 Management. Industrial Management
Business
spellingShingle HB Economic Theory
HD28 Management. Industrial Management
Business
Jayasingam, Sharmila
Chong, Maggie Mei Kei
Abu Bakar, Raida
Knowledge sharing behaviour of overqualified repatriates
description Purpose Organizations send their employees for international assignments so as to develop their international working experiences, their global knowledge and skills. These employees are then expected to return to their home countries (hereof known as repatriates) to share their newly gained knowledge or skills with their colleagues. This practice would benefit the organization's performance to some extent. Nonetheless, past literature had pointed out that many of such repatriates tend to leave their respective organizations as a result of not being able to fully utilize their newly acquired knowledge and skills, which led them to perceive that they were overqualified. This occurrence could lead to a loss of valuable knowledge for their organization. Aiming to address this issue at hand, the current study focuses on examining of the antecedents that could influence these repatriates' knowledge sharing behaviour. Design/methodology/approach This paper uses a research framework which was developed from three aspects of interest-perceived overqualification, affective commitment and the moderating effect of repatriation support practices on knowledge sharing behaviour of repatriates. Structural model analysis was carried out to assess 152 useable data which were collected from returning corporate repatriates in Malaysia. The SmartPLS 3.0 software was applied. Findings Repatriates with highly perceived overqualifications tend to exhibit low affective commitment. The impact of their perceived overqualification on knowledge sharing behaviour was fully mediated by their affective commitment. Repatriation support practice was found to strengthen the positive relationship between affective commitment and knowledge sharing behaviour. Originality/value The use of the relative deprivation theory showed that the outcome derived from this study could serve as an insight for organizations to understand how those repatriates' perception of overqualification influences their level of affective commitment, and subsequently, the extent to which they share knowledge upon returning.
format Article
author Jayasingam, Sharmila
Chong, Maggie Mei Kei
Abu Bakar, Raida
author_facet Jayasingam, Sharmila
Chong, Maggie Mei Kei
Abu Bakar, Raida
author_sort Jayasingam, Sharmila
title Knowledge sharing behaviour of overqualified repatriates
title_short Knowledge sharing behaviour of overqualified repatriates
title_full Knowledge sharing behaviour of overqualified repatriates
title_fullStr Knowledge sharing behaviour of overqualified repatriates
title_full_unstemmed Knowledge sharing behaviour of overqualified repatriates
title_sort knowledge sharing behaviour of overqualified repatriates
publisher Emerald Group Publishing Ltd
publishDate 2021
url http://eprints.um.edu.my/35031/
_version_ 1744649204133789696
score 13.211869