Unlike previous research that has largely focused on the influence of national
institutions on human resource management practices in China, our study taps
into the role of sub-national institutions. We demonstrate, via a qualitative
configurational analysis, that foreign subsidiaries of multinational
corporations still adapt HQ compensation practice to the local context despite
low regulatory pressure and low mobility of skills at the sub-national level.
This adaptation is facilitated by a decentralized structure in the multinational
corporation. Our study also shows that high regulatory pressure and high
portability of skills at the sub-national level alone are sufficient to induce
local adaptation of compensation practice. Our explanation points to the
significant role played by sub-national institutions in large and rapidly
changing emerging economies and contributes to research on local adaptation of
HRM practice in China. It offers an insight into forms of institutional agency
by political and economic actors at local levels of governance as they attempt
to influence the skills and human resources available for MNCs through
regulatory means.