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Global cities, work and family collectivism and work-family conflict in India

Grishma Shah (Manhattan College, Riverdale, New York, USA)
Ujvala Rajadhyaksha (College of Business, Governors State University, University Park, Illinois, USA)

South Asian Journal of Global Business Research

ISSN: 2045-4457

Article publication date: 17 October 2016

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Abstract

Purpose

The authors observe the impact of certain aspects of globalization on the work-family interface in India. Specifically, the purpose of this paper is to investigate the impact of life in Tier 1 (more globalized) vs Tier 2 (less globalized) cities, family/work collectivism and gender on work-family conflict (WFC) – both work interfering with family (WIF) conflict as well as family interfering with work (FIW) conflict.

Design/methodology/approach

The study surveyed 628 young employees on cultural values of collectivism and WFC.

Findings

Results suggest a main effect of tier in which Tier 1 city individuals experience more of both forms of WFC than Tier 2 city individuals. However, two- and three-way interactions between family/work collectivism and tier greatly moderate the main effect. Interactions indicate that family collectivism decreased WIF more for Tier 1 as compared to Tier 2 cities and work collectivism decreased FIW more for Tier 2 as compared to Tier 1 cities. The results suggest that high family collectivism creates high conflict for those who are low on work collectivism and high family collectivism creates low conflict for those who are high on work collectivism.

Research limitations/implications

The paper provides great insight into globalization and WFC within the context of cultural values. The paper calls for further studies on globalization, work life enrichment and cultural values.

Practical implications

The results build a case for more paid and organizationally supported interventions for work-life balance in India.

Originality/value

Large scale institutional changes, such as globalization, call for a reexamination of cultural dynamics. This study heeds the call and examines WFC in the context of rapid economic and social transformation occurring in India by bridging globalization, cultural change and WIF/FIW.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

The authors would like to express sincere gratitude to Michael Judiesch (Manhattan College) for his invaluable feedback on multiple versions of this paper. The authors sincerely appreciate his guidance.

Citation

Shah, G. and Rajadhyaksha, U. (2016), "Global cities, work and family collectivism and work-family conflict in India", South Asian Journal of Global Business Research, Vol. 5 No. 3, pp. 341-361. https://doi.org/10.1108/SAJGBR-03-2015-0023

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2016, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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