International Journal of

Business & Management Studies

ISSN 2694-1430 (Print), ISSN 2694-1449 (Online)
DOI: 10.56734/ijbms
From Brain Waste To Workforce Capability: An Integrative IMOI Framework For Organizational Credential Recognition In Global Talent Management

Abstract


Organizations worldwide face a persistent talent paradox: while skilled immigrants possess validated credentials, systematic barriers to recognition result in widespread underutilization of human capital. This phenomenon, termed brain waste, costs approximately $40 billion USD annually in forgone wages in the United States alone, while Canadian immigrants with foreign degrees experience overqualification rates 2.4 times higher than their Canadian-born counterparts. Brain waste constrains both organizational capability and individual flourishing. Despite its strategic significance, credential recognition remains inadequately theorized within talent management scholarship. This article addresses this theoretical gap by developing an integrative Input-Mediator-Outcome-Input (IMOI) framework positioning credential recognition as strategic talent management operating at the intersection of organizational practice, regulatory systems, and individual capability. The framework synthesizes six theoretical traditions: human resource development foundations establishing domain legitimacy through psychological, economic, and systems engagement; the capability approach providing normative grounding through its distinction between functionings and capabilities; dynamic capabilities theory explaining competitive advantage through sensing, seizing, and reconfiguring mechanisms; the Ability-Motivation-Opportunity framework specifying mediating processes; multilevel systems theory capturing cross-level dynamics; and care ethics grounding relational obligations to immigrant professionals. The framework explains why brain waste persists and specifies conditions for its resolution. The multiplicative AMO logic demonstrates why partial interventions consistently fail: weakness in any component creates structural bottlenecks nullifying the others' effects. High ability without opportunity produces validated but unemployable credentials; high motivation without ability produces engagement without competence validation; high opportunity without motivation produces unutilized access pathways. The ethical foundation positions credential recognition as a matter of human dignity requiring care-based organizational responses, addressing both economic and normative imperatives. Eleven testable propositions specify relationships across micro, meso, and macro levels, with particular attention to organizational absorptive capacity, strategic maturity, regulatory opportunity structures, and conversion factors that moderate recognition effectiveness. A theory-driven research agenda maps propositions to appropriate methodological approaches. The framework advances talent management theory by bridging economic and normative logics, demonstrating that effective credential recognition serves both organizational performance and the expansion of real freedoms that immigrant professionals have reason to value.