Organisational distance between GCC Islamic banks and their subsidiaries in Malaysia: a knowledge transfer perspective

Elmabrok, Ali Abusalah and Ng, Kim-Soon and M. Ago, Fathi Khalifa (2018) Organisational distance between GCC Islamic banks and their subsidiaries in Malaysia: a knowledge transfer perspective. 60% F204 Asian Journal of Applied Science and Technology (AJAST) Screen reader support enabled. Asian Journal of Applied Science and Technology (AJAST) Turn on screen reader support 10 Nur Nadia Binti Md Jurimi has joined the document., 2 (1). pp. 175-189. ISSN 2456-883X

[img] Text
AJ 2018 (541).pdf
Restricted to Registered users only

Download (504kB) | Request a copy

Abstract

GCC Islamic banks‟ subsidiaries in Malaysia have seen the going through tough, strapped by paltry returns and stymied by fierce competition from the local banks. The future of these GCC Islamic bank subsidiaries in Malaysia is being scrutiny through by when their headquarters back home is reaping a much higher return on equity. Thus, this research paper is conducted to investigate the organisational distance between the headquarters of GCC Islamic banks and their subsidiaries in Malaysia. Five large GCC Islamic banks subsidiaries in Malaysia were identified to document the organisational distance between headquarters of these banks and their subsidiaries in Malaysia. The data of this study were collected through sending out questionnaires to subsidiaries of GCC Islamic banks in Malaysia, as well as conducting semi-structured interviews with the top managements of these banks and through reviewing, tracking and comparing the information of their past and current from literature works to report the impact of organisational distance on knowledge transfer. The results show that the GCC Islamic banks subsidiaries in Malaysia are at the moderate level of organisational distance on knowledge transfer. The four factors which are structures, routines, decision-making and organizational culture, significantly influence the organisational distance between subsidiaries and the headquarters. The findings result in developing a conceptual unifying model of knowledge transfer between Islamic banking and financial services within Islamic banks and provide impetus for future empirical testing.

Item Type: Article
Uncontrolled Keywords: GCC Islamic Banks; Malaysia; Structures; Routines; Decision-Making; Organizational Culture and Knowledge Transfer.
Subjects: H Social Sciences > HG Finance > HG1501-3550 Banking
Divisions: Faculty of Technology Management and Business > Department of Business Management
Depositing User: UiTM Student Praktikal
Date Deposited: 09 Jan 2022 08:08
Last Modified: 09 Jan 2022 08:08
URI: http://eprints.uthm.edu.my/id/eprint/5479

Actions (login required)

View Item View Item