Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-dzt6s Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-22T12:46:51.816Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Questioning the Appropriateness of Examining Guanxi in a Wasta Environment: Why Context Should Be Front and Center in Informal Network Research – A Commentary on ‘De-Linking From Western Epistemologies: Using Guanxi-Type Relationships to Attract and Retain Hotel Guests in the Middle East’

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 November 2023

Sven Horak*
Affiliation:
The Peter J. Tobin College of Business, St. John's University, New York, NY, USA
Ibrahim Abosag
Affiliation:
SOAS University of London, London, UK Alfaisal University, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia
Kate Hutchings
Affiliation:
Department of ERHR, Griffith Business School, Griffith University, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia
Fadi Alsarhan
Affiliation:
Department of Management, ISC Paris Business School, Paris, France
Sa'ad Ali
Affiliation:
Derby Business School, University of Derby, Derby, UK
Arwa Al-Twal
Affiliation:
Department of Human Resources Management, Faculty of Business and Finance, American University of Madaba, Amman, Jordan
David Weir
Affiliation:
York Business School, York St John University, York, UK Lincoln Business School, University of Lincoln, Lincoln, UK University of Northumbria, Newcastle, UK
Fawaz Baddar ALHussan
Affiliation:
Léonard de Vinci Pôle Universitaire, Research Center, Paris, France,
Faten Baddar AL-Husan
Affiliation:
Newcastle University Business School, Newcastle upon Tyne, UK
*
Corresponding author: Sven Horak ([email protected])
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Extract

In this commentary we reflect on Shaalan, Eid, and Tourky's (2022) article in which they investigated the Chinese concept and practice of guanxi in the Middle East,1 a region in which wasta represents the common way of informal networking.2 While we encourage and welcome research into informal networks, we have serious concerns about the conceptual and methodological approaches taken by Shaalan et al. (2022) in investigating informal networks in the Middle East and explain herein why we do not believe guanxi should have been used in place of wasta.

Type
Dialogue, Debate, and Discussion
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of The International Association for Chinese Management Research

Introduction

In this commentary we reflect on Shaalan, Eid, and Tourky's (Reference Shaalan, Eid and Tourky2022) article in which they investigated the Chinese concept and practice of guanxi in the Middle East,Footnote 1 a region in which wasta represents the common way of informal networking.Footnote 2 While we encourage and welcome research into informal networks, we have serious concerns about the conceptual and methodological approaches taken by Shaalan et al. (Reference Shaalan, Eid and Tourky2022) in investigating informal networks in the Middle East and explain herein why we do not believe guanxi should have been used in place of wasta.

In this commentary, we commence by introducing wasta, the dominant concept in the Middle East, which Shaalan et al. (Reference Shaalan, Eid and Tourky2022) disregarded. Then we reflect on the conceptual approach of researching an indigenous network construct in a foreign environment of a different culture which already has its own informal networks. In this commentary, we also point out areas of concern in relation to research design and methodology. Finally, we provide suggestions for future research on informal networks, and we explicitly encourage further debate which draws on our commentary.

Informal Networks Research and Context

Applying Chinese guanxi in the Arab Middle East where wasta is pervasive is an approach that demands some reflection. Shaalan et al. (Reference Shaalan, Eid and Tourky2022: 859) suggest that guanxi ‘has not been fully investigated or understood in other contexts, especially the Middle East’; the aim of Shaalan et al. (Reference Shaalan, Eid and Tourky2022: 862) is to ‘advance understanding of guanxi as a holistic and global construct’. In our opinion, this endeavor comes as a surprise, since there are abundant studies showing that guanxi is a cultural concept rooted and unique to the Confucian context of the Chinese culture (see Barbalet, Reference Barbalet2021; Kiong & Kee, Reference Kiong and Kee1998). Although, in their article, Shaalan et al. (Reference Shaalan, Eid and Tourky2022: 874) stated that ‘the use of guanxi-type relationships is increasingly recognized by both practitioners and academics as an important source of stability in changing external circumstances’, the term ‘guanxi-type relationships’ has not been utilized in previous research studies nor have the authors cited any study using this specific term.

Like guanxi, wasta is a complex relational construct (Ali & Weir, Reference Ali and Weir2020; Al-Twal, Reference Al-Twal2021). Both forms of networks are embedded in, and shaped by, the respective cultural and institutional context in which they operate. In a nutshell, wasta describes informal ties and networks in the Arab world. Wasta is deeply engrained in the Arab (collective) culture, supported by Islamic ethics and values (Hutchings & Weir, Reference Hutchings and Weir2006), and defined by family, kin, clan, and sect membership, among others. It is fair to claim that in China, generally, Confucian behavioral ethics, including acquiescence to authority and institutional constraints, and uncertainty influence how and with whom relationships are developed and maintained. Wasta in the Arab world and guanxi in China are seen as a vital part of the respective business systems in the societies in which they operate. In the international management literature, it is widely accepted that a ‘business system is an amalgamation of culture and institutions’ (Hutchings & Weir, Reference Hutchings and Weir2006: 145). Contextual differences shape informal practices and that therefore impedes generalizations. There is ample evidence, for example, about wasta usage between men and women (Alsarhan, Ali, Weir, & Valax, Reference Alsarhan, Ali, Weir and Valax2021), whereas guanxi usage seems to be gender neutral. This certainly has practical and theoretical implications in a management context.

Research Design

Our major concerns in relation to the chosen research design are summarized as follows. In our opinion, it is disconcerting that a long-held concept and practices from one culture (guanxi) would be imposed upon another cultural context that also has its own long-standing concept and practices (wasta). Again, while we believe that networking ideals and practices around the world share some similarities, it is hard to understand why solely the concept of guanxi would be used in contexts in which wasta already exists. Though the authors note, with reference to emerging markets, that ‘context-specific research becomes even more important’ (Shaalan et al., Reference Shaalan, Eid and Tourky2022: 860), they essentially do not recognize the wasta-context prevalent in the Arab world. Although many well-known sources on wasta and comparative wasta research (e.g., wastaguanxi comparisons) are cited, the term wasta and its context is not actually used at all in the article. Instead, when describing the relational context of countries in the Middle East that they researched (all of which are Arab countries excepting Iran and Turkey), the authors refer to ‘Arab people’ (Shaalan et al., Reference Shaalan, Eid and Tourky2022: 869) even when the two aforementioned countries are predominantly Muslim but not Arab populations, and they use the term guanxi.

How relevant can this conceptualization be to the advancement of the extant stream of research on guanxi and the development dynamics of the construct driven by cultural and institutional constraints? It is obvious that the chosen approach will not help to understand the similarities and differences between guanxi and wasta better when wasta is not even explored, nor will it advance understanding about the context of emerging markets, specifically, the Arab Middle East. Moreover, there is a danger that other researchers may be encouraged to follow their lead and apply guanxi without sufficient consideration to other contexts that already have their own well-established informal network concepts and practices.

Despite the international nature of Shaalan et al.'s (Reference Shaalan, Eid and Tourky2022) study, there are also concerns in relation to methodological considerations that are common in international management and marketing research (e.g., Craig & Douglas, Reference Craig and Douglas2000; Sekaran, Reference Sekaran1983; Usunier, Reference Usunier1998; Van de Vijver & Leung, Reference Van de Vijver and Leung1997). First, the sample is made up of three different cultures (Arab, Turkish, and Iranian) with no conceptual or face validation of how the constructs are defined and operationalized within these cultures, especially the six constructs (bonding, empathy, reciprocity, personal trust, face, and affection) used as second-order to measure the ‘guanxi-type relationship’. Moreover, the authors did not examine the other cultures within the countries that are predominantly Arab. We note that in their study comparing Chinese and Arab informal networks, Abosag and Naude (Reference Abosag and Naude2014) did not include ‘face’ because it is a very Chinese construct. Second, the borrowing/adoption of measurement scales appears to be done in an ‘as-is’ style, meaning items ‘are not informative about the latent constructs in the other countries’ (Katsikeas & Madan, Reference Katsikeas and Madan2023: 2). Third, for empirical research in international management, scholars have argued not to disregard local cultural manifestations of the underlying constructs (e.g., Bhalla & Lin, Reference Bhalla and Lin1987; Malhotra, Agarwal, & Peterson, Reference Malhotra, Agarwal and Peterson1996). Therefore, we believe that the conceptualization and operationalization of constructs with respect to the three cultures the authors included in their study required more attention.

Suggestions for Future Research on Informal Networks

By utilizing the guanxi construct to explore relationships in the Arab Middle East, a chance is missed to contribute to ongoing research on respective constructs and context (e.g., Zhang, Hartley, Al-Husan, & ALHussan, Reference Zhang, Hartley, Al-Husan and ALHussan2021) including the changing nature of wasta within the Arab world, and to critically evaluate generalizations on informal networks. We believe that these two general directions of research are branches with the highest potential to add to theoretical knowledge and practice.

Path 1: Deepening Construct and Contextual Knowledge

The research design suggested by Shaalan et al. (Reference Shaalan, Eid and Tourky2022) may wrongly legitimize others undertaking future informal network research to investigate, for instance, blat/svyazi in Brazil (and disregarding jeitinho), yongo in India (and disregarding jaan-pehchaan), or wasta in Korea (and disregarding yongo and inmaek). This approach would (1) detach construct from context; (2) deploy a construct from one context to another, from which there can hardly be implications drawn that help understanding of the construct itself and the context better; and (3) ignore the methodological techniques and processes developed by international management scholars over the past five decades or so to validly compare constructs across different contexts/cultures. Also, with such an approach, the dynamics between the context and construct can hardly be captured. Informal network research pressing questions include, for example, will informal networks disappear or persist once formal institutions become more effective? How can informal networks be made more inclusive and fairer? How can the dark sides of informal networks be minimized? How may support be provided for the bright sides of informal networks? Finally, we can ask what institutional transformations are needed in the context of these questions. An answer to this leads to theoretical and practical progress that can only be found when research designs align and integrate construct and context.

Path 2: Working toward Generalizations

We see potential and indeed we explicitly support research that identifies common characteristics of informal networks which work toward generalizations. Comparative informal network research has consistently pointed out similarities (and differences) of selected informal networks (Abosag & Naude, Reference Abosag and Naude2014; Horak & Taube, Reference Horak and Taube2016; Hutchings & Weir, Reference Hutchings and Weir2006). Since every country has contextually embedded informal networks,Footnote 3 there is still a long way to go to understand exactly the similarities. Goodwill, for example, seems to be a characteristic shared in most networks; gender-inclusiveness and other areas of diversity-inclusiveness, in contrast, is an important aspect where informal network characteristics differ very much by context. Moreover, whether informal networks are rather affectively or instrumentally driven (or both) is again an important question for future empirical research. Drawing generalizations about informal networks is tricky. Not to mention that informal networks are often taboo to talk about and at times heavily disliked and, in some contexts, organizations and individuals are reticent to admit engaging in practices that are part of such networks. Paradoxically, while people discourage and condemn their usage, they continue to use them because in network societies it is tacitly expected to engage in informal networking, voluntarily and often involuntarily, and it is a necessity to ensure things are done.Footnote 4

When exploring informal networks, research designs should use the respective network term in survey questionnaires and interview questions by asking, for instance, ‘how high would you rate the level of trust in your yongo network?’ instead of ‘how high would you rate the level of trust in your network?’. In network societies, very different dyadic and network ties exist within which individuals are members. In very simplified terms, blat is a different tie and network than svyazi (in Russia and the post-Soviet Union countries), so is yongo and inmaek (in South Korea).

Exploring informal networks and understanding the practice of informal networking in business across cultures requires a deep understanding about the nature and characteristics of the respective network constructs. Respecting the context (i.e., culture and institutions) is key to the advancement of knowledge. Research into informal networks in different contexts/cultures should be no different from other comparative studies in international business and management in that adhering to commonly accepted principles of comparative cross-cultural research methodology is indispensable.

Sven Horak () is a Professor of Management at The Peter J. Tobin College of Business at St. John's University in New York. He works in the area of global management, organization, and leadership. His research examines the role that informality plays in managing globally. Specifically, he explores informal structures and the drivers and ideals of informal networking.

Ibrahim Abosag ( and ) is a Professor of Marketing at Alfaisal University and at SOAS University of London. His research interests include B2B focusing on the role of informal business networks in business relationships. Most of his research focuses on the conceptualization and measurement of the concepts of wasta and Et-Moone. His research interests also include analysis of firm capabilities and strategic approaches to internationalization of firms. Another area of interest is brand experiential marketing on virtual platforms.

Kate Hutchings () is a Professor of HRM at Griffith Business School, Griffith University, Australia. She has held visiting positions in universities in eight countries and has undertaken, and presented, research in a wide range of countries in Asia-Pacific, Europe, Middle East, and North America. Her research streams include: expatriates and global mobility; HRM in developing economies (especially Asia-Pacific and Middle East); and HRM with a focus on diversity in organisations.

Fadi Alsarhan () is an Assistant Professor of Intercultural Management at ISC Paris Business School. His main research areas include international HRM, cross-cultural management, managerial, and business realities in the MENA region. His current research focuses on the study of contextual influences and culture on international HRM and business practices, more specifically the dynamics and impact of informal networks on managerial and business practices within a large international context.

Sa'ad Ali () is a Senior Lecturer in Leadership and Management at the University of Derby, UK. His research explores the role of informal networks in business practices with a particular focus on wasta in Arab countries. His pedagogical research focuses of the development of intercultural skills for graduates.

Arwa Al-Twal () is currently a full-time Assistant Professor and a Chairperson of the Human Resources Management department in the Faculty of Business at the American University of Madaba, Jordan. There, she offers lectures on staffing, international HRM, HR planning, and business ethics. Her research interests include performance management within Higher Education context, wasta, and HRM in the Middle East.

David Weir () is a Professor of Intercultural Management at York St John University and Visiting Professor at Lincoln International Business School with research interests focusing on the Middle East, Islamic management, informal business networks, risky work, vulnerable systems and resilient response, and auto-ethnographic and critical methods. He was a Founding Member of the British Academy of Management and has undertaken consultancy with many leading organizations, including Islamic Development Bank, World Bank, Cambridge Muslim College, the Palestinian Authority, and Sheikh Khalifa Government Excellence Program in the UAE.

Fawaz Baddar ALhussan () is an Associate Professor of Strategic Sales & Account Management at Léonard de Vinci Pôle Universitaire Business School (EMLV) Paris and the MBA Programme Director. He explores International Key Account Management in the Arab world and emerging economies. His research aims to shed light on the complexities of conducting business across borders and within different cultural contexts. His research interests are I-KAM, international marketing, and informal buyer-supplier networks.

Faten Baddar AL-Husan () is a Lecturer/Assistant Professor of International Human Resource Management at Newcastle University Business School, UK. She works in the area of cross-cultural management and international & comparative human resource management. Her main research areas include transfer of MNCs’ HRM practices, and knowledge to worldwide subsidiaries by advanced and emerging MNCs, with a current focus on the transfer of sustainable HRM practices, global leadership, B-2-B, & Key Account Management and informal networks.

Footnotes

1. The countries that constitute the Middle East have been variously categorized throughout history. We follow Metcalfe and Murfin's (Reference Metcalfe, Murfin, Metcalfe and Mimouni2011) categorization which includes Bahrain, Cyprus, Egypt, Iran, Iraq, Israel/Palestine, Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon, Oman, Qatar, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, Syria, Turkey, United Arab Emirates, and Yemen. All the countries are considered part of the Arab world except Israel, Iran, and Turkey although there are Arab people living in all these countries also. All the countries are predominantly Muslim except Israel (Metcalfe & Murfin, Reference Metcalfe, Murfin, Metcalfe and Mimouni2011). In addition to the abovementioned countries, there are also countries in North Africa and East Africa/Horn of Africa that are members of the Arab League and where Arabic is widely spoken, including Algeria, Comoros, Djibouti, Libya, Mauritania, Morocco, Somalia, Sudan, and Tunisia (Nations Online, 2023). We note that Shaalan et al. (Reference Shaalan, Eid and Tourky2022) included Iran and Turkey in their study of the Middle East. While Iran and Turkey are part of the Middle East as defined above, wasta is an Arabic term/practice and is not applicable in either country. Moreover, in Iran, the informal network context that is similar to guanxi in China and wasta in the Arab world is known by the term party bazi.

2. Following Minbaeva et al. (Reference Minbaeva, Ledeneva, Muratbekova-Touron and Horak2023), we use the term ‘informal networks’, rather than ‘social networks’. Informal networks are seen as culturally embedded. They can be described as biographical by-products rather than being intentionally accumulated social capital. Paradoxically, they are often but not always genuinely affective but also instrumental. For informal networks, we refer to a few examples including guanxi (China), yongo and inmaek (South Korea), blat and svyazi (Russia and the post-Soviet Union countries), wasta (Arabic-speaking countries), sifarish (Pakistan), and jinmyaku (Japan) (comp. Horak, Afiouni, Bian, Ledeneva, Muratbekova-Touron, & Fey, Reference Horak, Afiouni, Bian, Ledeneva, Muratbekova-Touron and Fey2020).

3. For an overview, see Ledeneva, A. (Ed.) 2018. The Global Encyclopaedia of Informality, Volumes 1 and 2. London: UCL Press.

4. This distinguishes them from social networks and the act of social networking that, in the Western business literature, is largely regarded as a very positive and encouraged activity, open to everyone and instrumental to advancing peoples’ careers (comp. Minbaeva et al., Reference Minbaeva, Ledeneva, Muratbekova-Touron and Horak2023).

References

Abosag, I., & Naude, P. 2014. The development of special forms of B2B relationships: Examining the role of interpersonal liking in developing guanxi and Et-Moone relationships. Industrial Marketing Management, 43(6): 887897.10.1016/j.indmarman.2014.05.003CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Al-Twal, A. 2021. Narrative inquiry: A proposed methodology for wasta research. Thunderbird International Business Review, 63(4): 517521.10.1002/tie.22200CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ali, S. A., & Weir, D. 2020. Wasta: Advancing a holistic model to bridge the micro-macro divide. Management and Organization Review, 16(3): 657685.10.1017/mor.2020.27CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Alsarhan, F., Ali, S. A., Weir, D., & Valax, M. 2021. Impact of gender on use of wasta among human resources management practitioners. Thunderbird International Business Review, 63(2): 131143.10.1002/tie.22186CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Barbalet, J. 2021. Where does guanxi come from? Bao, shu, and renqing in Chinese connections. Asian Journal of Social Science, 49(1): 3137.Google Scholar
Bhalla, G., & Lin, L. 1987. Cross-cultural marketing research a discussion of equivalence issues and measurement strategies. Psychology & Marketing, 4(4): 275285.Google Scholar
Craig, S., & Douglas, S. 2000. International marketing research, 2nd edn. West Sussex, UK: John Wiley & Sons Ltd.Google Scholar
Horak, S., & Taube, M. 2016. Same but different? Similarities and fundamental differences of informal social networks in China (guanxi) and Korea (yongo). Asia Pacific Journal of Management, 33(3): 595616.10.1007/s10490-015-9452-xCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Horak, S., Afiouni, F., Bian, Y., Ledeneva, A., Muratbekova-Touron, M., & Fey, C. F. 2020. Informal networks: Dark sides, bright sides, and unexplored dimensions. Management and Organization Review, 16(3): 511542.10.1017/mor.2020.28CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hutchings, K., & Weir, D. 2006. Guanxi and wasta: A comparison. Thunderbird International Business Review, 48(1): 141156.10.1002/tie.20090CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Katsikeas, C. S., & Madan, S. 2023. Best practices in scale deployment: Maximizing relevance to cross-cultural and marketing strategy research. Journal of Consumer Psychology, 33(1): 245247.Google Scholar
Kiong, T., & Kee, Y. 1998. Guanxi bases, xinyong and Chinese business networks. British Journal of Sociology, 49(1): 7596.10.2307/591264CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Malhotra, N., Agarwal, J., & Peterson, M. 1996. Methodological issues in cross-cultural marketing research. International Marketing Review, 13(5): 743.10.1108/02651339610131379CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Metcalfe, B. D., & Murfin, T. 2011. Leadership, social development and political economy in the Middle East: An introduction. In Metcalfe, B. D. & Mimouni, F. (Eds.), Leadership development in the Middle East: 160. Cheltenham, UK: Edward Elgar.10.4337/9780857938114CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Minbaeva, D. B., Ledeneva, A., Muratbekova-Touron, M., & Horak, S. 2023. Explaining the persistence of informal institutions: The role of informal networks. Academy of Management Review, 48(3): 556574.10.5465/amr.2020.0224CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nations Online. 2023. Arab league. [Cited 16 January 2023]. Available from URL: https://www.nationsonline.org/oneworld/arab_league.htmGoogle Scholar
Sekaran, U. 1983. Methodological and theoretical issues and advancements in cross-cultural research. Journal of International Business Studies, 14(2): 6173.10.1057/palgrave.jibs.8490519CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shaalan, A., Eid, R., & Tourky, M. 2022. De-linking from western epistemologies: Using guanxi-type relationships to attract and retain hotel guests in the Middle East. Management and Organization Review, 18(5): 859891.10.1017/mor.2021.21CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Usunier, J. 1998. International & cross-cultural management research, 1st ed. London: Sage Publications.10.4135/9781446250242CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Van de Vijver, F., & Leung, K. 1997. Methods and data analysis for cross cultural research. London: Sage Publications.Google Scholar
Zhang, M., Hartley, J. L., Al-Husan, F. B., & ALHussan, F. B. 2021. Informal interorganizational business relationships and customer loyalty: Comparing guanxi, yongo, and wasta. International Business Review, 30(3): 101805.10.1016/j.ibusrev.2021.101805CrossRefGoogle Scholar