Impact of Covid-19 on procedural justice in MNCs
Abstract
Given the unpredictable nature of the pandemic, global MNCs have had to rethink their decisionmaking
when handling certain business activities. Nevertheless, managers have an overall
responsibility regarding decision-making. Procedural justice has been studied to contextualize to
what extent managers in different subsidiaries in different countries experience fair decisionmaking
processes during Covid-19. Procedural justice has continued to be studied to expand a
knowledge gap within the international business research field. In previous research, a deficient
account is revealed when aspects such as voice, neutrality, respect, and trustworthiness have been
used as parameters to measure managers' involvement experiences when HQ assigns mandates.
Through a qualitative study, a deductive method has been used to evaluate previous theories on
Procedural justice. Hence, nine managers participated in the study from 4 different countries where
different degrees of justice were experienced among the managers. Continuing procedural justice
during the pandemic has expressed several aspects of decision-making under uncertain
environments. Through the empirical collection, the researchers have made it possible to account
for the extent to which managers are involved when activities go from decentralization to
centralization, where different managers find dichotomous views on fair decision allocations. It
has also come to the researchers 'perception that the respondents from the same office generally
experience justice similarly. The respondents have also expressed the lessons the managers learned
when businesses need to adapt accordingly to the current state of the environment.
Degree
Master 2-years
Other description
MSc in International Business and Trade
Collections
View/ Open
Date
2022-07-05Author
Jaf, Aran
Zia, Malik Hashim
Keywords
Procedural justice
Covid-19
Managers
Decision-making
Autonomy
Series/Report no.
2022:14
Language
eng