By the way, New Café is a great place for breakfast.
I have to dispute the $250 per day spending average and would love to see a study that says the average daily spend of a sex tourist in Sosua is that high.
Oh yes it is. Don't be fooled.
Being a math guy, I would be interested in the numbers behind this drop in the bucket and the size of the total bucket. Feel free to help me with the numbers as they pertain to Sosua.
My best guess would be that prostitution brings in at least $100,000/day. That number could be very low considering my lack of knowledge and the way one wants to crunch the numbers. Compare that to Casa Marina's daily numbers and you might be able to figure out how many Casa Marinas you would have to build to replace the income from prostitution.
Just found 2013 DR tourism revenue at 4.5 billion per year or about 12 million per day. Looks to me that the Sosua mongers account for about a 1% drop in the DR tourism bucket.
I get the feeling this is not about the monger as much as the type of monger.
I could not hazard a guess with any such estimate. The record keeping is sparse at best for both the locals and sex tourists who are involved.
I am quite certain that the government isn't going to generate such numbers because they would just as soon the sex tourists never visited and they really don't care how much they spend.
whatever the government might say publicly is all bluster.despite the fact that the spend in Sosua, as a portion of the composite tourist spend, is not significant, Sosua has to be seen in isolation, as far as this matter is concerned. the fact that Sosua might only account for a fragment of the 6 billion overall revenue is not the issue. Sosua has to continue, in one guise or another. it has no other ostensible means of continuation beside the prostitution trade. whatever other economic activities exist are inconsequential. one of the basic issues associated with Sosua is the economic concept of multipliers. because of the nature of the business, a lot of the participants are breadwinners for families, and the source of income to small entrepreneurs such as hairdressers, garment peddlers, people who provide lodgings, food, and other sustenance. obliterating prostitution in Sosua will create a huge swath of unemployed people, and not the kinds we want to see unemployed. this is not like some guys from Goldman Sachs being made redundant, with a golden parachute. this is laying off Belkis, and leaving it up to Fausto to find the money.-
do you know here your cellphone is?
Could be close. Maybe even 1.5%. In any event, the government does not want sex tourism. If they did, they would have come up with a way to promote it instead of doing what they do.
What you are not calculating is WHERE this Money is directly being Pumped into .
Directly to the POOREST SINGLE MOMS... Not for example to a Bigger Business where it MAY Trickle down, or may NOT..
and That changes everything ...
But maybe the guys with the Economics degrees can explain it better..
whatever the government might say publicly is all bluster.despite the fact that the spend in Sosua, as a portion of the composite tourist spend, is not significant, Sosua has to be seen in isolation, as far as this matter is concerned. the fact that Sosua might only account for a fragment of the 6 billion overall revenue is not the issue. Sosua has to continue, in one guise or another. it has no other ostensible means of continuation beside the prostitution trade.?
The calculations of the payments for prostitution by the whore monger saviors of poorest single moms is something the government actually cares about in the DR?
It's not just the gov't, it is the Dom people who want the hooker trade to end. And everybody is in on it from the Pres on down to your North Coast family groups.
True, they are not proficient in having an effective clean up, but it will happen. And the closer that development money comes to Sosua, the faster it will happen. The port in POP will help in speeding things along. And yes, there will be some pain during the transition. But that does not factor into their discussions. Doms just want the hooker trade gone. The majority of Doms.
which Dominican ''people'' are you talking about? where? the majority of Doms?
where do you guys meet these people to whom you cavalierly refer? how come i have never met anyone who is in severe opposition to prostitution in the DR?