Abraham, FilipKonings, JozefVanormelingen, S.2017-12-022017-12-022009http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12127/4775The 2008 ' credit crisis' brought to attention that business and finance operate in open-complex systems. In contrast, the period leading up to the crisis was dominated by narrower thinking developed from the idea that business was about economics and that management concerned agency. This paper revisits ideas first developed in the late 1990s that arose from the observation that business was confronting interacting ' systems.' The main systems were around (sustainable) development, the internationalization of business and a set of social and cultural concerns resulting from globalization. The paper anticipated the collapse of parts of the economic system as a result of hyper-competition. It points to the growing significance of ' identity' and its potential to create a ' clash of values.' It concludes by suggesting that as we enter this ' systems age' our models and assumptions around the boundaries of companies and the idea of companies and stakeholders would be severely challengedenStrategyPrice and Wage Setting in an Integrating EuropeReview of World Economics514991408231648695689