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Prostitution A study, ''The Sex Sector: The Economic and Social Bases
of Prostitution in Southeast Asia'', published by the International
Labor Organization (ILO), covers Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines
and Thailand, and describes how prostitution in the region has developed
into a lucrative business that influences employment and national income
and contributes significantly to the region's economic growth. ''The
scale of prostitution has been enlarged to an extent where we can justifiably
speak of a commercial sex sector that is integrated into the economic,
social and political life of these countries,'' the ILO study said.
The study also said ''the economic and social forces driving the sex
industry show no signs of slowing down, particularly in light of rising
unemployment in the region.'' The study estimates that between 0.25%
and 1.5% of the total female population of the four countries is engaged
in prostitution and that the sex industry accounts for between 2% and
14% of the countries' gross domestic product (GDP). In all four of the
countries studied, the report has shown prostitution to provide significantly
higher earnings than any other form of unskilled labor. ''If we include
the owners, managers, pimps and other employees of the sex establishments,
the related entertainment industry and some segments of the tourism
industry, the number of workers earning a living directly or indirectly
from prostitution would be in several millions,'' said Lin Lean Lim,
an ILO labor market expert and author of the study. Due to the economic
meltdown since July last year, Lim said she expects the number of prostituted
persons in the region to increase. ''Where you don't have social safety
nets or where you don't have social security arrangements, then again
the danger is much greater because it's perhaps one of the types of
activities where anyone can go into,'' she said.
The study said government authorities also collect substantial revenues in
areas where prostitution thrives, illegally from bribes and corruption and
legally from licensing fees and taxes on the many hotels, bars, restaurants
and game rooms that flourish in its wake. Lim also said many poor families
in rural areas depend on the earnings of women who are prostituted. (Dario
Agnote, "Sex trade key part of S.E. Asian economies, study says," Kyodo
News, 18 August 1998)
The ILO stopped short of calling for prostitution to be legalized, but said
it should be officially recognize, advantages being to extend "the taxation
net to cover many of the lucrative activities associated with it" and "to
formulate labor policies needed to deal with the several million people thought
to be working in the sex industry." (Elif Kaban, "UN labour body urges recognition
of sex industry," Reuters, 18 August 1998) The sex industry has grown in Southeast
Asia due in part to the surge in recent years in the number of women in Asia's
migrant force, where they now equal or outnumber male migrants. (International
Labor Organization, Elif Kaban, "UN labour body urges recognition of sex industry,"
Reuters, 18 August 1998)
Prostitution Tourism
International investigators say foreign paedophiles are usually American
or European. Of 160 foreign pedophiles arrested on child sex-abuse charges
in Southeast Asia between 1992 and 1994, the largest portion -- 25% -- were
American, 18% German, 14% Australian and 12% English. (End Child Prostitution
in Asian Tourism study, "In sex trade, chilhood is bought and sold," Lambiet,
17 May 1998)
Up to 40,000 pornographic photographs of children, many of from Southeast
Asia, can be viewed on the Internet estimates Ron O'Grady, chair of the End
Child Prostitution, Child Pornography and Trafficking of Children for Sexual
Purposes group. "The demand for children in the sex trade is great. Every
year, people from all over the world travel to Asia to have sex with children,
taking photographs and videos," he said. (Poona Antaseeda, "Expert urges global
law to end child pornography on the Internet," Bangkok Post, 3 June
1998)
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The actual number of prostituted women enslaved, trafficked or kept in prison
in Southeast Asia was no more than 20% of the total number of women engaged
in prostitution. (International Labor Organization, Elif Kaban, "UN labour
body urges recognition of sex industry," Reuters, 18 August 1998) Smugglers
are increasingly trading in women in Southeast Asia because of the shadowy
nature of the sex sector. (International Labor Organization, Elif Kaban, "UN
labour body urges recognition of sex industry," Reuters, 18 August
1998)
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