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Yak genome provides new insights into high altitude adaptation.
Gentris and Shanghai Institutes of Preventative Medicine expand collaboration.
Chinese researchers identify rice gene enhancing quality, productivity.
Quintiles opens new Center of Excellence in Dalian to support innovative drug development.
BGI demonstrated genomic data transfer at nearly 10 gigabits per second between US and China.
Quintiles deepens investment in China - New Quintiles China Headquarters and local lab testing solution announced.
Beike earns AABB Accreditation for cord blood and cord tissue banking.
Epigenomic differences between newborns and centenarians provide insight to the understanding of aging.
Growing Cord Blood Cells for Cancer Patients.
Umbilical Cord Blood Transplantation in Adults - The Debate between One vs. Two Units.
Stem Cells in Umbilical Cord.
Cord Blood Banking - To Go Public or Stay Private.
Metabolic Syndrome and Diabetes: Current Asian Perspectives.
A Crisis in the Development of Antibiotics.
The Marketing of Unapproved Stem Cell Products: An Industry-wide Challenge.
Draining the Goodwill of Science – The Direct-to-Consumer Genetic Testing Industry in East Asia.
Biodiesel – From Lab to Industry.
The Appearance and Development of Commercial Laboratories in China.
Cord Blood Banking – To Go Public or Stay Private.
Open Source – The Future of Drug Discovery.
VACCINES – Where are we headed?
Leveraging on External Expertise.
IMF policies have been widely criticized in the aftermath of the Asian crisis. Key critics questioned the appropriateness and the sequencing of financial liberalization programs which, along with insufficient monitoring and inadequate prudential regulations, left the financial sectors of the affected countries highly leveraged and exposed. This paper examines the impacts of similar reforms on the efficiency of the banking system in Tunisia, a country whose economy has been reshaped by the IMF/World Bank prescribed economic adjustment plans since 1987. Using various DEA models and panel data covering the period 1992–1997, we evaluate the individual effects of each component of the reforms on the banking industry overall.
Meanwhile, we compare the effects on banks because of the different ownership structures over time. We also pay particular attention to specific factors that have kept the financial sector in Tunisia relatively stable in the midst of the global market turmoil caused by the Asian crisis.