![](https://SOULREST.ORG/image/174.jpg)
WEIGHT: 57 kg
Bust: 3
1 HOUR:90$
NIGHT: +50$
Sex services: Strap-ons, Fetish, Extreme, Cunnilingus, Cross Dressing
In the absence of such a requirement, many more drivers would be able to enter the taxi driving profession, increasing supply and reducing prices. For example, nepotism β the cultural norm in many non-European countries β can be said to interfere with the efficiency of labor markets. In some countries like Singapore it is permissible but unregulated, in others e. In countries in which prostitution has been legalized, it generates considerable revenues the global revenue is estimated at more than USD bln.
Ignoring the moral aspect of the problem, there are many economic and not only reasons to legalize prostitution. It is no secret that the sex industry exists in every country, forming a substantial part of the underground economy.
Legalization would help shed light on the shadow sex industry activities, providing possibilities for regulation and taxation.
Tax income thus generated could be used to improve public services, such as education, giving young women other professional opportunities, and in this way helping treat the social root causes of prostitution. In Nevada the only US state where prostitution is legal , annual tax revenues exceeded 20, dollars for female sex workers Ayres, For many developing countries, prostitution is a major export industry and source of foreign earnings, a means of redistributing income on a global scale.
Driving prostitution underground is a costly proposition, straining the police force and the entire justice system. While recent data on prostitution-related policing activities are not available, public spending on this issue is certainly non-negligible. Besides, legalization would solve the problem of overcrowded prisons. According to available data, in California alone, more than eleven thousand people were arrested for prostitution in Not only would legalization reduce public expenditures, it would also relieve the police force of the duty to monitor streets, allowing it, instead, to spend more time and effort on preventing other, more serious crimes.