Publication | Closed Access
Prostitutes, Pimps, and Brothels: Intermediaries, Information, and Market Structure in Prostitution Markets
31
Citations
18
References
2012
Year
TradeProstitution MarketsLawMarket SurplusMarket OutcomesUnfair CompetitionMarket DesignProstitution LawsGender StudiesEconomic AnalysisMarket StructureMarket InstitutionAntitrust EnforcementEconomicsOrganized CrimeTransactional SexCommercial SexMarket MechanismSexual BehaviorAbuse Of DominanceCartelSex Work StudiesPublic EconomicsCompetition PolicyBusiness
Prostitution is a multi‐billion dollar, globally distributed, low‐concentration service industry that is receiving increasing attention in the economics literature. This article focuses on a widespread, but little studied, feature of this environment—the role of intermediaries (pimps or brothel owners) on market outcomes. Prostitution laws and markets are perhaps unique in that transactions between principals (prostitutes and johns) are legal in many countries, while intermediary activity (pimping) is illegal. After surveying the varying cross‐country legality of agents we develop a simple theoretical model to analyze how the presence or absence of intermediaries shifts the distribution of market surplus. We show that eliminating pimps and brothels may shift surplus in non‐obvious ways, depending on the precise function they perform and on whether equilibrium is pooling or separating across “high quality” and “low quality” market segments. The implications of alternative policy regimes (intermediaries legal or illegal) are considered.
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1970 | 22.2K | |
1973 | 14.3K | |
2009 | 475 | |
2002 | 344 | |
2000 | 277 | |
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2001 | 125 | |
2007 | 109 | |
2008 | 74 | |
2003 | 61 |
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