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disadvantages that occur from hiring managers that originate from the difficult country

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Human Resource Management

There are companies, which have operations, in countries that are referred to as being difficult. There are disadvantages and advantages, which occur, as a result of ensuring that managers from that country are hired. The advantages are that is shows that the company trusts the local citizens, and in turn, gains favor from the citizens in the country. Low costs or labor is experienced as money is not spent on recruiting managers from other countries. Also, the company has a variety of managers to choose from the local environment and thus, maximizing on the opportunity. Furthermore, the company is recognized by the government for its contribution to the local economy (DeNisi & Griffin, 2011. 34). In turn, it can benefit from incentives, which are being offered by the government, such as tax cuts. A research carried out in China gave evidence that hiring local managers is better as compared to hiring expatriates. The findings were that the home country managers delivered better results as compared to the expatriates.

Also, there are disadvantages that occur from hiring managers that originate from the difficult country. There is a limitation, as the managers being recruited may not have the proper qualifications. Some of the managers in the difficult country may not have the exposure, as those who come from countries such as America and the United Kingdom. Moreover, the control exercised at the headquarters is reduced by hiring managers from difficult countries. Also, the managers might not be capable of balancing global priorities and the local demands. This will be difficult for the company, and it can incur extra costs in training the local managers.

In some scenarios, managers are sent from the headquarters to the difficult country to lead the existing operations. In turn, they are certain advantages that occur as a result of this action. Companies that use this approach believe that the expatriate employees are better off in managing subsidiaries that exist in the difficult country. In turn, it ensures that there is a closer coordination and control of the various international subsidiaries. The expatriate has knowledge concerning how they can run the subsidiary well. Also, it ensures that experienced managers with international knowledge become established (Stahl & Miller & Tung, 2002.220). This means that managers can acquire more knowledge in the difficult country and in turn, use it to the benefit of the rest of the company. Furthermore, it ensures that effective management and business practices are transferred to the subsidiary company. Diversification of culture takes place when the expatriate goes and works at the subsidiary company. Many cultures are brought together at the work place, and in turn, creates a conducive working environment. This means that a multinational orientation is given to employees by the manager from the headquarters.

Some of the disadvantages include high rates of failure, as the managers are usually affected by many negative factors. For example, the difficult country may experience insecurity and heavy pollution. This will in turn affect the manager’s perception and affect how they conduct their work. They might find it difficult to adjust the new culture and environment. Also, it leads to high salaries and transfer costs, which may sometimes affect the company’s finances. The up keep of expatriates is usually extremely high, and this is an added expense to the company. At the work place, the local management may be affected and not be motivated as they believe that hiring expatriates is a disincentive (Stahl & Miller & Tung, 2002.223). In turn, their work performance declines, and it might create problems in the company. Lastly, most of the expatriate managers suffer from family and personal problems as they are away from home, and this increases the chances of failure at the difficult country.

In some Human Resources companies, there is usually a need to cut down on costs. They choose to achieve the latter by making sure that managers are not entitled to hardship pay when they are required to work in difficult countries. Also, the managers can be denied the hardship pay when they work in countries where key facilities are located. There are many factors that are considered in finding out if paying the managers hardship allowances is an expense that is worthwhile. Through sending the managers to the difficult countries, they offer better expertise and parent control. Also, they will be able to advance their careers, also, develop professionally as well as personally (Stahl & Miller & Tung, 2002.226). If the manager, has shown that they have the capability of succeeding then they should be entitled to the hardship pay. The managers should be entitled to hardship pay depending on the country where they are working. For example, a manager sent to work in Somalia is more prone to being killed, as the one sent to work in China. In turn, the manager should be remunerated according to the working conditions that exist in the difficult country. If I obtained the opportunity to work in a difficult country as an expatriate, I would agree. The pay expatriates get is extremely enticing, and it enhances one’s career portfolio.

Work Cited

Stahl, G. & Miller, E. & Tung. R. “Toward the Boundary less Career: A Closer Look at the Expatriate Career Concept and the Perceived Implications of an International Assignment.” Journal of World Business 37, 3 (2002): 216–227.

DeNisi, Angelo. & Griffin. Ricky. HR 1st Ed .New York: South-Western College Pub. 2011. Print.

Alternative Healthcare

Alternative Healthcare

I will first start by giving a definition of alternative healthcare: this is a group of medical as well as healthcare systems, products and practices which are currently being considered as part of the convectional health care practices that exist. Often the alternative healthcare practices are based on knowledge or treatment methods which are not tested, untraditional and unscientific. There are instances where the alternative health care can be offered alongside scientific medicine and in such cases it is known as complementary alternative medicine. A variety of therapeutic practices as well as preventive health care can be classified under alternative healthcare these include naturopathy, homeopathy, herbal medicines and chiropractic. These practices are not in line with the medical methods which are accepted and they might even have no scientific explanation behind their effectiveness (U.S Department of Health and Human Services, 2012).

I will go ahead and look at the categories of alternative healthcare practices. Alternative healthcare practices can be divided into five categories; these are first alternative medical systems which are based on systems practice and theory. Some of these systems developed in the western cultures are naturopathic and those developed in non western cultures are Ayurveda and traditional Chinese medicines. The second category is mind-body interventions that employ techniques that are designed for enhancing the capacity of the mind in affecting the functions as well as symptoms of the body and they include mental healing, meditation and therapies using creative outlets like dance, art or music (U.S Department of health and human services,2012).The third category is therapies which are biologically based and they use substances got from nature like vitamins and herbs examples of such treatments include use of dietary supplements as well as herbal products. The fourth category is manipulative and body-based methods which involve the manipulation of some of one’s body parts and they are such as chiropractic manipulation and massage. Finally the fifth category is energy therapies. These therapies use energy fields and can be divided into two; biofield therapy an example is therapeutic touch and bioelectromagnetic therapies (Pietrangelo, Anne 2011).

Alternative healthcare has many benefits to the public despite this people have not fully embraced the concept of alternative medicine. Alternative healthcare is now slowly being accepted into the health professions that are mainstream. This is because people have begun appreciating the benefits that can be got from alternative medicine. Traditionally most insurance companies do not offer any cover for alternative medicine. This therefore calls for changes in the public policy when it comes to the allocations of alternative healthcare. I shall therefore make some proposals when it comes to changing the status quo in public policy pertaining to alternative healthcare. First of all I propose that insurance companies should as much as possible offer insurance that specifically covers some of the alternative healthcare practices. There is one insurance company American western Life Insurance Company is a good example of an insurance company which has tried to incorporate these alternative medicine practices in their policies ( Bausell, 2013).The insurance company provides a network of close to 300 providers that are found in Colorado, Arizona, New Mexico who specialize in yoga, aromatherapy, naturopathy, acupuncture, chiropractic and many other practices also propose that the insurance companies reimburse clients that go through practices which are based on the alternative healthcare such as alternative therapy that is provided for heart diseases. Another public policy that I can propose is the support of research studies that focus on these alternative healthcare practices. Examples of research that should be funded is the treatment of cancer using shark cartilage as well as studying how effective bee pollen is when it comes to treatment of allergies. If the public policies that I have proposed are put into practice then alternative healthcare will be maximally used and who knows maybe it can actually be the answer to most of the health problems that have not yet been solved by the scientific medical practices.

Work cited

Bausell, Richards. Alternative” health practices.(2013).Retrieved April 11,2013 from http://skepdic.com/althelth.htmlBradford, Nikki. Alternative healthcare. San Diego, CA: Thunder Bay Press, 1997. Print.

Larson, Christine A. Alternative medicine. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 2007. Print.

Palumbo, Anthory. Naprapathy: the effective healthcare alternative. Chicago, Ill.: A. Palumbo, 2005. Print.

Pietrangelo, Anne.Natural choice directory. Paying for complementary and Alternative medicines.(2011).print

Raso, Jack, and Stephen Barrett. “Alternative” healthcare: a comprehensive guide : natural medicine, “hands-on” healing, spiritualism, occultism, and much more. Amherst, N.Y.: Prometheus Books, 1994. Print.

U.S Department of Health and Human Services. What is Complementary and alternative Medicine? (2012).Retrieved April 11, 2013 from http://cim.ucdavis.edu/clubs/camsig/whatiscam.pdf

Disadvantaged Children Article Critique

Disadvantaged Children Article Critique

Contents

TOC o “1-3” h z u HYPERLINK l “_Toc380145330” Introduction PAGEREF _Toc380145330 h 1

HYPERLINK l “_Toc380145331” Introduction and reason for the study PAGEREF _Toc380145331 h 1

HYPERLINK l “_Toc380145332” Hypothesis and research questions PAGEREF _Toc380145332 h 2

HYPERLINK l “_Toc380145333” Results and conclusions PAGEREF _Toc380145333 h 2

Introduction

Goodnight, J. A., Lahey, B. B., Van Hulle, C. A., Rodgers, J. L., Rathouz, P. J., Waldman, I. D., D’Onofrio, B. M. (2012). A quasi-experimental analysis of the Influence of Neighborhood disadvantage on child and adolescent conduct problems. Journal of Abnormal Psychology, 0021843X, Vol. 121, Issue 1

Introduction and reason for the study

The characteristics of children in varied places have always been of interest to scholars and policymakers in varied fields. It has always been recognized that the outcome of an individual has a bearing on social, economic, as well as intellectual aspects of that individual, as well as society at large. This is the basis for the study by Goodnight et al (2012), whose study was built on the premise that children brought up in disadvantaged neighborhoods that are characterized by high levels or crime, residential instability, low levels of cohesion and social organization, as well as poverty have high vulnerability to varied negative outcomes such as depression, academic failure, conduct problems, teenage pregnancy and anxiety. The study was set up to examine or determine whether neighborhood disadvantage comes as a causal risk factor for conduct problems. On the same note, the current study recognized that previous research in the field has been limited with regard to potential or likely causal effects of neighborhood disadvantage on the conduct problems of offspring, limitations that it aimed at addressing.

Hypothesis and research questions

Researchers in this study hypothesized that neighborhood disadvantage influences conduct problems in children. The study was driven by varied research questions. First, the research dwells on the question on whether children of young mothers are more vulnerable or disadvantaged by the age of their mother or family background. In addition, it poses the question on whether biases resulting from the usage of reports of conduct problems and neighborhood characteristics from one informant are responsible for the observed relationship (Goodnight et al, 2012). The multilevel analysis was founded on mother-related neighborhood disadvantage, as well as youth reported conduct problems across 10 to 13 years (sample n=4524) and mother reported conduct problems across 4 to 13 years obtained from the CNLSY (Children of the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth), as well as National longitudinal Survey of Youth. Participants in these surveys were evaluated every year from 1979 to 1994, with a total of 4912 women all of whom had at least one child participated.

Results and conclusions

The results of this study showed that neighborhood disadvantage is a considerable or significant factor in the conduct problems of the offspring for mothers that participated in the survey. The survey showed the existence of significant association between neighborhood disadvantage and offspring conduct problems when comparing cousins while controlling for individual and family characteristics, and unrelated individuals (Goodnight et al, 2012). The implication of the present study is that the there is a significant association between neighborhood disadvantage with increased risk for conduct problems in childhood, even after researchers control for salient, measured risk factors that have a high correlation with both conduct problems and neighborhood disadvantages, as well as unmeasured risks that affect individuals in extended families (Goodnight et al, 2012). In essence, aspects pertaining to environments that relate to higher neighborhood disadvantages have autonomous influence on the conduct problems of offspring.

Needless to say, the study comes with a number of limitations that may impede its applicability and necessitate further research. However, it would come in handy in informing policymakers on how to enhance the varied interventions aimed at correcting the behavior of children (Goodnight et al, 2012). It gives credence to previous research that insinuated that interventions that target varied facets or aspects of the societies rather than specific individuals and families may be effective in reducing the prevalence or frequency pertaining to behavioral and psychological problems that come with significant societal, as well as personal costs (Eamon, 2001).

References

Goodnight, J. A., Lahey, B. B., Van Hulle, C. A., Rodgers, J. L., Rathouz, P. J., Waldman, I. D., D’Onofrio, B. M. (2012). A quasi-experimental analysis of the Influence of Neighborhood disadvantage on child and adolescent conduct problems. Journal of Abnormal Psychology, 0021843X, Vol. 121, Issue 1

Eamon, MK (2001). Poverty, parenting, peer, and neighborhood influences on young adolescent antisocial behavior. Journal of Social Service Research. 2001;28(1):1–23