Course Project Draft, I’ve attached the initial project outline
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Comparative Human Resource Management in Singapore and Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
Isdory Lyamuya
DeVry University
HRM584: Human Resources and Technology
Professor: Danielle Camacho
November 16, 2025
Comparative Human Resource Management in Singapore and Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
The proposal will entail an analysis of the human resource management practice in Singapore and Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, as possible countries where a new production facility may be established within the Asia Pacific region. The paper explains how national institutions, labor laws, talent sources, and cultural practices have been strategically utilized in HR practices that facilitate the creation of massive local recruitment to support activities such as creation, supervision, quality, logistics, and support. According to Malik et al. (2022), contextual legal and cultural aspects and economic impacts are enormous in the way that organizations develop and operate their HR systems.
Among other ancillary issues that will be examined in the project, the critical ones are crucial to the decision. These issues include HR legal literacy and accountability, the necessity to comply with labor laws, staffing, remuneration, training, and performance management within HR, as well as the HR employee relations policy. In addition, remote working and technology-mediated communication are also regarded as features of the digitalization of HR (Razak et al., 2022). The other aspect, which will be evaluated, is political and economic stability, language and business culture, the presence of unions, and the strategic location of HR functions in the two cities. It is a combination of these dimensions that defines the capacity of the organization to recruit, nurture, and support qualified local talent.
The project assumes that Singapore and Kuala Lumpur will continue to grow knowledge-intensive and service-oriented economies and develop digital HR systems that will enable employees to work on the basis of flexibility and analyze the workforce (Malik et al., 2022). It is also expected that expectations of compliance and accountability will continue to dominate HR practices in both the Malaysian public and private sectors, which will impact HR competencies across the wider labor force (Yahya et al., 2023). The desired result will be the apparent comparison of HR opportunities and limitations in both cities, identifying the most suitable HR best practices that can be institutionalized in the environment, and providing a reasonable suggestion of the better place for the new facility based on an international HR standpoint.
High-Level Outline: Singapore versus Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
I. Introduction
· Present the hypothetical multinational manufacturing firm and its regional expansion objective.
· Explain the purpose and significance of comparing Singapore and Kuala Lumpur from an HR perspective.
II. Country and City Context
· Overview of the demographic, economic, and political situation in Singapore and Kuala Lumpur.
· Explain how currency, language, and important aspects of business culture affect HR practice.
III. Legal and Compliance Environment
· Compare employment legislation, required benefits, and the liability of the employers in both nations.
· Examine the HR legal literacy, accountability expectations, and risk management implications and compliance (Yahya et al., 2023).
IV. HRM Policies and Workforce Capability
· Look into methods of staffing and selection, such as local, regional, and expatriate talent.
· Compare performance management systems, compensation, and benefits.
· Evaluate the competence of the workforce, level of education, and accessibility to technical and management skills.
V. Labor Relations and Employee Voice
· Explain the presence of unions and collective bargaining practices and the government’s involvement in industrial relations.
· Compare the impacts of the labor relations climates on flexibility in the headcount, working hours, and workplace change.
VI. HR Structure and Strategic Role
· Compare the common location of the HR departments in companies in both cities.
· Talk about how far HR is a strategic partner or an administrative responsibility (Malik et al., 2022).
VII. Digital HR and Emerging Trends
· Analyze adoption of digital HR systems, data-driven HR, and remote work practices in Singapore and Kuala Lumpur (Rangaswamy et al., 2024).
· Take into account the trends in sustainable HR, diversity and inclusion, and international talent competition at the regional level.
VIII. Comparative Evaluation and Recommendation
· Combine the strengths and weaknesses of both cities in setting up the new production plant.
· Give a reasonable proposal on the desirable place and point out significant HR practices that are necessary to succeed.
References
Malik, A., Pereira, V., Budhwar, P., Froese, F. J., Minbaeva, D., Sun, J., … & Xue, S. (2022). Multilevel relational influences on HRM practices: a cross-country comparative reflective review of HRM practices in Asia.
Asian Business & Management,
21(5), 745.
Rangaswamy, E., Nawaz, N., & Lu, E. (2024). Impact of COVID-19 on Singapore’s human resource practices.
Cogent Business & Management,
11(1), 2301791.
Razak, S. S. A., Zulkarnain, I. F., Yaacob, T. Z., & Omain, S. Z. (2022). Legal Literacy of Human Resource Officers in Malaysia.
International Journal of Academic Research in Business and Social Sciences,
12(1).
Yahya, N., Said, J., Zakaria, N. B., & Baltov, M. (2023). Enhancing organisational accountability: The role of human resource management in Malaysian statutory bodies.
Journal of Nusantara Studies (JONUS),
8(3), 453–479.