Every place where laissez-faire economics has been introduced --
Zambia, for instance, where it was imposed by the
IMF -- an
economic disaster has befallen. Of course, these
supranational organizations don't see it that way; they're concerned about economic
stability alone.
By most standards, collapse of a country's
medical and
educational systems and reduction of
life expectancy by 10 or so years would be considered a failure. Even
Ronald Reagan, for all his free-market
rhetoric, was one of our country's most
protectionist presidents. (Although
selectively protectionist.) His economic program was more
Keynesian in character, considering the amount of money pumped into the
Pentagon. Countries like
South Korea and
Taiwan happily ignore the dictates of the IMF -- and although
Asia is in
recession -- are the better for it.