A bridge over troubled water: Replication, integration and extension of the relationship between HRM practices and organizational performance using moderating meta-analysis
A bridge over troubled water: Replication, integration and extension of the relationship between HRM practices and organizational performance using moderating meta-analysis
Meta-analyses on the relationship between human resource management (HRM) practices, as an aggregate and individually, and organizational performance has yielded mixed results, further fueling the theoretical debate among HRM scholars. To resolve this tension, we conduct a moderating meta-analysis of 89 primary studies to replicate, integrate and extend prior work. Comparing the variance explained by differences in HRM practices versus those explained by contextual and empirical factors indicates that context and research design have a strong influence on the relationship between HRM practices and performance. Despite the voluminous research on this issue, the differences in the relationships of various HRM practices explains only 4% of the variance in performance, whereas, societal context, industry sector and firm size explain 33%, 12% and 8%, respectively. Empirical contingencies including four categories of performance outcomes and four types of participants explain 13% and 9% of the variance in the results, respectively. Thus, our findings provide strong support for the contingency theory. The theoretical and empirical implications for future research in the area are discussed.
134-148
Tzabbar, Daniel
3e5f9b35-a993-4307-827e-0538b8983c76
Tzafrir, Shay
a13e02df-0a3b-42c0-9062-dc1bd4a3f1bd
Baruch, Yehuda
25b89777-def4-4958-afdc-0ceab43efe8a
March 2017
Tzabbar, Daniel
3e5f9b35-a993-4307-827e-0538b8983c76
Tzafrir, Shay
a13e02df-0a3b-42c0-9062-dc1bd4a3f1bd
Baruch, Yehuda
25b89777-def4-4958-afdc-0ceab43efe8a
Tzabbar, Daniel, Tzafrir, Shay and Baruch, Yehuda
(2017)
A bridge over troubled water: Replication, integration and extension of the relationship between HRM practices and organizational performance using moderating meta-analysis.
Human Resource Management Review, 27 (1), .
(doi:10.1016/j.hrmr.2016.08.002).
Abstract
Meta-analyses on the relationship between human resource management (HRM) practices, as an aggregate and individually, and organizational performance has yielded mixed results, further fueling the theoretical debate among HRM scholars. To resolve this tension, we conduct a moderating meta-analysis of 89 primary studies to replicate, integrate and extend prior work. Comparing the variance explained by differences in HRM practices versus those explained by contextual and empirical factors indicates that context and research design have a strong influence on the relationship between HRM practices and performance. Despite the voluminous research on this issue, the differences in the relationships of various HRM practices explains only 4% of the variance in performance, whereas, societal context, industry sector and firm size explain 33%, 12% and 8%, respectively. Empirical contingencies including four categories of performance outcomes and four types of participants explain 13% and 9% of the variance in the results, respectively. Thus, our findings provide strong support for the contingency theory. The theoretical and empirical implications for future research in the area are discussed.
Text
HRMR Final paper Tzabbar et al -final
- Accepted Manuscript
More information
Accepted/In Press date: 3 August 2016
e-pub ahead of print date: 13 August 2016
Published date: March 2017
Organisations:
HRM and Organisational Behaviour
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Local EPrints ID: 410792
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/410792
ISSN: 1053-4822
PURE UUID: 04d88903-e118-476e-b680-392d2269fdd8
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Date deposited: 09 Jun 2017 09:40
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 05:10
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Author:
Daniel Tzabbar
Author:
Shay Tzafrir
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