Navigating Embeddedness: Experiences of Indian IT Suppliers and Employees in the Netherlands

被引:0
作者
Ernesto Noronha
Premilla D’Cruz
Muneeb Ul Lateef Banday
机构
[1] Indian Institute of Management Ahmedabad,Organizational Behaviour Area
[2] Indian Institute of Management Ahmedabad,Organizational Behaviour Area
来源
Journal of Business Ethics | 2020年 / 164卷
关键词
Global production networks (GPNs); Embeddedness; IT services; India; Netherlands;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
In this article, we shift the usual analytical attention of the GPN framework from lead firms to suppliers in the network and from production to IT services. Our focus is on how Indian IT suppliers embed in the Netherlands along the threefold characterization of societal, territorial and network embeddedness. We argue that Indian IT suppliers attempt to display societal embeddedness when they move to The Netherlands. Our findings reveal that the endeavour by Indian IT suppliers to territorially dis-embed from the Dutch context is reinforced by their peripheral position in the network and their ability to offshore work in a bid to contain costs, in addition to the influence of client domination. Therefore, territorial embeddedness is considered to be secondary to societal embeddedness which is intertwined with client interest while neglecting the interest of other network members. Nonetheless, the inter-firm relationship is complex, given the tension between societal, territorial and network embeddedness. While preferring Indian IT suppliers because of their low pricing, Dutch clients also insist on compliance with the institutional context of the Netherlands especially when it comes to Dutch employees. This results in hybridization which means that Indian IT suppliers find ways to adhere to the institutional framework for Dutch nationals while simultaneously insulating Indian employees from the same. Consequently, a highly unfair segmented internal labour market develops, with Dutch nationals being treated more favourably as compared to Indian nationals. Nonetheless, to address these violations, Indian employees prefer individual strategies of resilience and rework rather than a collectivization response.
引用
收藏
页码:95 / 113
页数:18
相关论文
共 166 条
[1]  
Agrawal NM(2012)Managing growth: Human resource management challenges facing the Indian software industry Journal of World Business 47 159-166
[2]  
Khatri N(2016)Trans-scalar embeddedness and governance deficits in global production networks: Crisis in South African fruit Geoforum 75 52-63
[3]  
Srinivasan R(2017)Multi-scalar labour agency in global production networks: Contestation and crisis in the South African fruit sector Development and Change 48 721-745
[4]  
Alford M(2018)The political economy of state governance in global production networks: Change, crisis and contestation in the South African fruit sector Review of International Political Economy 25 98-121
[5]  
Alford M(2001)The Indian software services industry Research Policy 30 1267-1287
[6]  
Barrientos S(2004)Role of transnational corporations in the evolution of a high-tech industry: The case of India’s software industry—A comment World Development 32 555-560
[7]  
Visser M(2005)Global capitalism and commodity chains: Looking back, going forward Competition and Change 9 153-180
[8]  
Alford M(2008)Analysing global economic organization: Embedded networks and global chains compared Economy and Society 37 339-364
[9]  
Phillips N(2011)Decent work in global production networks: Framing the policy debate International Labour Review 150 297-317
[10]  
Arora A(2016)Internationalization strategies of emerging market-based multinationals: Integration of Indian ICT-ITES suppliers on the Dutch service outsourcing market European Planning Studies 24 1374-1391