" Liberia" was short hand: I mean the several countries in West Africa where the epidemic exists.
That assumes that you have good data real time data about the epidemic.
If you start strongly punishing countries for revealing data about local epidemics you soon don't have that data anymore.
Obviously you can limit travel in any way you want: you can let health workers go in and out while blocking regular travelers.
As the article describes the one person who actually did spread the disease to the West was the nurse Teresa Romero Ramos. Health workers are much more likely to come into contact with bodily fluids and get the virus than the average person wealthy enough to buy plane tickets.
If you start strongly punishing countries for revealing data about local epidemics you soon don't have that data anymore.
The effect of "punishing" is not linear, it only matters if it reaches a threshold. So as long as any travel ban comes with more aid (which seems likely), the info will be revealed as before.
Related to: Forty Days , Low Hanging Poop
From professor Gregory Cochran's blog West Hunters.