Boston Globe

Fighting Slavery With Economics

Human trafficking is a very profitable, low risk business venture. Photo: <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/samuelr/2212313791/">Samuel Ronnqvist (flickr)</a>
Human trafficking is a very profitable, low risk business venture. Photo: Samuel Ronnqvist (flickr)

Modern slavery takes many forms. Free the Slaves estimates that worldwide, there are 27 million people being forced to work without pay. In a recent interview with the Boston Globe, Siddarth Kara says that human sex trafficking has become one of the most lucrative types of slavery, with much higher profit margins than those of top-performing companies like Google. Kara, a former investment banker with an MBA and a law degree, believes that the best way to fight human trafficking is to address its economic side:

Sex trafficking is probably the most profitable form of slavery the world has ever seen, in that you can acquire or transport someone for a few hundred dollars, maybe a couple thousand dollars, and generate tens of thousands, if not hundreds of thousands....That’s the essential functioning and logic of the business model: low cost and risk to transport the slave, and immense profitability on the exploitation side.

Because the sex trade involves such minimal risk, the cost to consumers has plummeted. Kara says that in some countries, sex costs the equivalent of one and a half to two hours of work — which many people can afford. If prosecution rates for traffickers were to increase, prices would go up and demand would fall. Kara also recognizes the importance of cutting off the supply of sex slaves:

The minute [you] pull someone out of a sex slave condition, [you’ve] cut off all future cash flows. In terms of a sex slave it’s 10, 15, 20, transactions a day, a week, a month, year after year. You’ve got to pull people out, care for them...and then prosecute and convict effectively. That means several things: fast track courts, judicial review, and an economic penalty regime that makes it uneconomic to be in this business. If you start to alter the landscape, then the perception by the offender is: This business doesn’t pay. Right now the perception is: Huge profit, almost no risk, I’m there. This is about money: It’s not cruelty for the sake of cruelty. I’ve met traffickers. Some of them are just mundane opportunists."

Kara estimates that his proposed reforms would cost about $400 million a year, which could be a relatively cheap solution to a major problem. To read Kara's full interview, click here.


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