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Returnee status, academic staff rewards and psychological contract fulfilment in China's higher education sector

Jun Gu (Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia)
Chris Nyland (Monash University, Melbourne, Australia)
Xin Fan (School of Public Affairs and Administration, University of Electronic Science and Technology of China, Chengdu, China)
Dan Wu (Guangxi University of Finance and Economics, Nanning, China)

Personnel Review

ISSN: 0048-3486

Article publication date: 21 May 2021

Issue publication date: 3 May 2022

441

Abstract

Purpose

China's universities have decoupled academic staff rewards and returnee status (scholars with a higher degree or substantial work experience gained outside China). This development possibly poses a threat to returnees' psychological contract fulfilment (PCF), i.e. the extent to which employees perceive their employer has fulfilled their promises or obligations regarding the employment relationship. Drawing on the efficiency–flexibility balance theory, the authors predict Chinese universities would institutionalise human resource management (HRM) practices intended to countervail the decoupling's potentially negative influence. Furthermore, the positive effect of returnee status on PCF would subsequently manifest as higher job satisfaction and lower turnover intention.

Design/methodology/approach

Utilising a mixed-method approach, the authors first undertook a large-scale multi-time field survey of Chinese business school academics from a group of non-elite universities located in Southern China. The authors then conducted a series of in-depth interviews with a subsample of the surveyed cohort, which was then analysed using multivariate regression analyses and machine-aided qualitative content analysis (i.e. NVivo 10).

Findings

The authors find that, despite the decoupling of returnee status and faculty rewards, returnee status is positively associated with PCF. This positive association further manifests as an indirect effect on job satisfaction and a negative indirect effect on turnover intention. The authors also determine that returnees experience higher PCF because universities have revised HRM practices to reward evidenced job activities. Returnees can gain a competitive advantage by using their skills gained overseas.

Originality/value

This study makes four original contributions. First, the authors investigate a neglected yet essential issue, namely, how returnee status relates to PCF in China's universities. Second, the authors enrich the theoretical understanding by introducing the efficiency–flexibility balance theory into the employee PCF literature. Third, the authors provide new insights on how China's universities maximise the effectiveness of academic returnees' talents and skills. Finally, by focusing on non-elite universities, the authors provide insights relevant to a broader faculty population than is available in the existing literature.

Keywords

Citation

Gu, J., Nyland, C., Fan, X. and Wu, D. (2022), "Returnee status, academic staff rewards and psychological contract fulfilment in China's higher education sector", Personnel Review, Vol. 51 No. 4, pp. 1298-1313. https://doi.org/10.1108/PR-08-2020-0612

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2021, Emerald Publishing Limited

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