The Influence of the Spouse on American Expatriate Adjustment and Intent to Stay in Pacific Rim Overseas Assignments
- 1 December 1989
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Journal of Management
- Vol. 15 (4) , 529-544
- https://doi.org/10.1177/014920638901500403
Abstract
Past international human resource management literature has suggested that most American multinationalfirms that employ expatriate managers have difficulty successfully retaining these managers in overseas assignments. Although some scholars have suggested that the inability of the spouse to adjust is one of the major reasons expatriate managers return early from their overseas assignments, few researchers have attempted to verify empirically a relationship between the spouse's adjustment and the adjustment and intentions to stay or leave of the expatriate manager. This study found that a favorable opinion about the overseas assignment by the spouse is positively related to the spouse's adjustment and the novelty of the foreign culture has a negative relationship with the spouse's adjustment. Additionally, the adjustment of the spouse is highly correlated to the adjustment of the expatriate manager and the adjustment of the spouse and the expatriate are positively related to the expatriate's intention to stay in the overseas assignment.Keywords
This publication has 19 references indexed in Scilit:
- Conducting International Mail Surveys: The Effect of Incentives on Response Rates with an Industry PopulationJournal of International Business Studies, 1988
- An Experimental Investigation into Cross-National Mail Survey Response RatesJournal of International Business Studies, 1988
- Work Role Transitions: A Study of American Expatriate Managers in JapanJournal of International Business Studies, 1988
- VOLUNTARILY LEAVING AN ORGANIZATION: AN EMPIRICAL INVESTIGATION OF STEERS AND MOWDAY'S MODEL OF TURNOVER.The Academy of Management Journal, 1987
- INTERCULTURAL TRAINING FOR MANAGERS: A COMPARISON OF DOCUMENTARY AND INTERPERSONAL METHODS.The Academy of Management Journal, 1987
- Total life stress: A multimethod validation of the construct and its effects on organizationally valued outcomes and withdrawal behaviors.Journal of Applied Psychology, 1985
- Sojourner adjustment.Psychological Bulletin, 1982
- A Contingency Theory of SocializationAdministrative Science Quarterly, 1976
- The Assignment of American Executives Abroad: Systematic, Haphazard or Chaotic?California Management Review, 1971
- Ascribed Behavioral Determinants of Success-Failure among U.S. Expatriate ManagersJournal of International Business Studies, 1971