characters needed for self-improvement, its attributes
have the capacity to encourage excellent self-
confidence. We also point out that all employees have
to pay attention to the base-country culture. This is an
important implication because it supports stronger
confidence, that every foreign worker must
understand the basic culture of the State where they
work. According to Nolan et al. (2016), found that
confidence gains are in tune with the expansion of
professionals that include acquisition of knowledge
and skills as human capital, participation in
collaborative learning community networks as social
capital, and the ability to exercise professional rights
as decision capital. This process helps develop and
strengthen individual skills and create a learning-
focused climate (Jones, 2002).
There are several limitations that can be identified
for current research. First, generalize these results to
a wider population problematic because the findings
are based on small employees and small areas.
Nevertheless, this study should be replicated with
larger and more professional samples. Secondly, only
employees from four countries (Korea, Japan, China,
and Indonesia) were observed. The last limitation,
other variables of religion and family background
have not been identified. Future studies should seek
to expand and deeply analyze the unidentified
variables (religion and family background) that affect
an employee's self-confidence. Both variables have
an important role in shaping confidence.
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