The 1990's in Argentina... IMF promised to keep lending money only if the country would privatize most of it's state held companies for pennies on the dollar, which it did, mostly to US and Spain interests, oftentimes without a bidding process. Receipts obviously fell, since these companies were now making money for private individuals, and compounded with a corrupt government that had no intentions to stop spending, the IMF just keep spoonfeeding loan after loan after loan and extending payment schedules. External debt growth was rampant. Then the IMF suggested increasing taxes. Eventually, the balloon popped, recession crept in, unemployment went up, and the country could not service the debt anymore.
Shortly afterwards, recession got real bad, but the IMF kept giving advice on what to do, even though indigence skyrocketed. Eventually, the president of the country had to fly out of the government building (akin to the White House) and resign, after a couple of protesters were shot dead. Most of these privatized companies started siphoning any earnings in US dollars out of the country, putting even more pressure on inflation which was already rampant. People were told they could not withdraw their savings. Democracy in the country died at around that time. That was the end of any kind of "free market", right wing, conservative party in Argentina, which basically became for all intents and purposes a single party system: center-left, left, or very left. A disgrace.
This was around the time the IMF came out and admitted they made "mistakes":
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/2...na-crisis.html
In the following years, due mostly to a commodities boom, since fresh dollars were coming in at the time, the government simply paid them in full and told them to shut their piehole and GTFO.
Brazil, who had a similar experience with the IMF, did the same thing.
http://www.larouchepub.com/other/200...razil_imf.html