Volume 39, Issue 2 p. 89-103
RESEARCH ARTICLE

Managing employee performance in transition economies: A study of Vietnamese public organizations

Tai Anh Vu,

School of Management, Victoria University of Wellington, Wellington, New Zealand

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Geoff Plimmer,

School of Management, Victoria University of Wellington, Wellington, New Zealand

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Evan Berman,

Corresponding Author

School of Government, Victoria University of Wellington, Wellington, New Zealand

College of Social Sciences, National Chengchi University, Taipei, Taiwan

Correspondence

Evan Berman, Victoria University of Wellington, Level 8, Rutherford House, Wellington 6011, New Zealand.

Email: evanmberman@gmail.com

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Meghna Sabharwal,

School of Economic, Political and Policy Sciences, The University of Texas, Dallas

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First published: 02 May 2019
Citations: 7

Summary

Employee performance management (PM) is a public sector reform that furthers development objectives by increasing employee performance, aligning employee efforts with organizational goals, and addressing poor performance. This study discusses employee PM in development contexts. Based on varied employee PM efforts in Vietnamese public organizations, it finds that (a) advanced employee PM practices significantly increase perceived organizational and employee outcomes compared with less advanced employee PM practices, and that (b) executive accountability, Human resource (HR) autonomy and entrepreneurial leadership are strongly associated with successful implementation of employee PM. This article provides detailed description of employee PM practices and suggests implications for implementing public sector reforms in transitional settings.

The full text of this article hosted at iucr.org is unavailable due to technical difficulties.