Does national culture matter? Understanding the impact of supply chain integration in multiple countries

  • Shan Liu
  • , Jing Tan
  • , Hongyi Mao
  • , Yeming Gong

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

27 Scopus citations

Abstract

Purpose: With increasing globalization, supply chain management in various national cultures requires understanding. This study aims to examine the moderating effects of individualistic and uncertainty avoidance cultures on the relationship between supply chain integration (SCI) and different dimensions of firm performance (i.e. flexibility and financial). Design/methodology/approach: This study collected 124 pairwise survey data from supply chain and senior managers of retail firms in 35 countries. Hofstede’s national culture index was used to examine the moderating effects. Structural equation modeling and regression analysis were used to test the model. Findings: Results corroborate that in a higher uncertainty avoidance culture, the positive influence of SCI on flexibility performance is stronger, but that on financial performance is weaker. By contrast, individualism reduces the positive influence of SCI on financial performance, but does not moderate that on flexibility performance. Originality/value: This paper proposes a contingent model for SCI-performance relationships by integrating the relational view and the national cultural perspective. Critical national cultural dimensions moderate the effects of SCI on flexibility and financial performance. Therefore, operational managers should design differential SCI strategies in various cultural settings.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)610-628
Number of pages19
JournalSupply Chain Management
Volume26
Issue number5
DOIs
StatePublished - 2021

Keywords

  • Financial performance
  • National cultures
  • Operational performance
  • Supply-chain management

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