Owed some protection

Governments are benefiting from the labour of sex workers, who increase their countries' gross domestic product and contribute directly to state coffers through taxes and fees paid by establishments that sell or support commercial sex. In return for their contributions to the state, governments owe sex workers better protection of their rights, access to sustained rehabilitation assistance, and improved services to enhance work options for girls and women.

A 1998 International Labour Organisation study declared the sex industry to be 'assuming massive proportions' in Southeast Asia. Governments were estimated to earn billions of US dollars (2-14 per cent of GDP in some cases) from direct sex work and associated businesses, while an estimated 350,000 to 1.3 million women worked in the sector in four countries alone - Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines and Thailand.

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