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The macro-contextual drivers of the international mobility of managers and executives

Arturo Bris (IMD World Competitiveness Center, Institute for Management Development—IMD, Lausanne, Switzerland)
Shlomo Ben-Hur (Institute for Management Development—IMD, Lausanne, Switzerland)
José Caballero (IMD World Competitiveness Center, Institute for Management Development—IMD, Lausanne, Switzerland)
Marco Pistis (IMD World Competitiveness Center, Institute for Management Development—IMD, Lausanne, Switzerland)

Journal of Global Mobility

ISSN: 2049-8799

Article publication date: 2 February 2023

Issue publication date: 26 May 2023

169

Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this paper is to assess the country-level drivers of managers' and executives' mobility. Both sub-groups play a fundamental role in entrepreneurship, innovation and ultimately on wealth creation in destination countries. The objective is to capture how the impact of economic, cultural and institutional factors differ for these sub-groups’ vis-a-vis the broad highly skilled group's mobility.

Design/methodology/approach

The paper investigates the country-level drivers of managers' and executives' bilateral migration from 190 countries to 32 Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) countries. It builds a model on four macro-contextual attractiveness factors of destination countries: economic conditions, cultural affinity, institutions and quality of life. The authors use fixed-effects regressions and carry several model specifications comparing the impact of different attractiveness factors on the migration of lower skilled, highly skilled, managers and executives.

Findings

The authors find that economic incentives do not motivate managers' or executives' mobility. The quality of life is more significant in driving executives' mobility than economic measures are. Cultural affinity, institutions and quality of life are more important for managers. Ethnic relations are significant for the overall highly skilled sample.

Practical implications

These results have implications for global companies interested in recruiting managers and executives and their recruitment strategies. International businesses attempting to maximize their access to international managers, for instance, can develop recruitment packages that capitalize on the particularities of the quality of life of the potential destination country. Such packages can contribute to streamlining the process and focusing on candidates' needs to increase the likelihood of relocation. The study’s results, in addition, have policy implications in terms of the “branding” of countries whose aim is to attract managers and other highly skilled talent. Officials can build an effective country-branding strategy on the existence of ethnic networks, effective institutions and quality of life to attract a particular segment of the talent pool. For instance, they can develop a strategy to attract executives by focusing on a specific cultural characteristic and elements of the quality of life such as the effectiveness of their country's healthcare and education systems.

Social implications

The paper also points out to the issues that policymakers must resolve in the absence of an education system that guarantees the talent pool that the economy needs. For those countries that rely on foreign talent (such as Switzerland, Singapore and the USA), it is paramount to promote safety, quality of life and institutional development, in order to guarantee a sufficient inflow of talent.

Originality/value

Most global studies focus on the complete migrant stock or on highly skilled workers in particular. The authors disaggregate the sample further to capture the drivers of managers' and executives' migration. The authors find that latter sub-groups respond to different country-level attractiveness factors compared to the broader highly skilled sample. In doing so, the authors contextualize the study of mobility through a positively global lens and incorporate the impact of some of the factors generally overlooked.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

The authors wish to thank the participants to the IMD Research Brown Bag Seminar (2nd May 2019) for helpful comments on an early draft.

Citation

Bris, A., Ben-Hur, S., Caballero, J. and Pistis, M. (2023), "The macro-contextual drivers of the international mobility of managers and executives", Journal of Global Mobility, Vol. 11 No. 2, pp. 252-273. https://doi.org/10.1108/JGM-07-2022-0035

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2023, Emerald Publishing Limited

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