Author Topic: Fixing The Economy. WE Can Do It  (Read 954 times)

Offline Corus Boy

2014 In the first official study of money spent on 'illegal' activities it was found that Britons spend more on drugs and prostitutes than on beer and wine. The Office of National Statistics (ONS) said that spending on illegal drugs and prostitution was worth an estimated £12.3bn to the UK economy in 2013.

So let's do it.

Buy more grass, buy more arse, and we are on Easy Street, next year we'll be millionaires.  :lol:

Offline puntingking

2014 In the first official study of money spent on 'illegal' activities it was found that Britons spend more on drugs and prostitutes than on beer and wine. The Office of National Statistics (ONS) said that spending on illegal drugs and prostitution was worth an estimated £12.3bn to the UK economy in 2013.

So let's do it.

Buy more grass, buy more arse, and we are on Easy Street, next year we'll be millionaires.  :lol:

I don't get how paying sex workers would contribute to our economy or buying drugs as drug dealers would not pay tax or collect tax from their customers and neither would sex workers. 

Unless I am missing something here  :unknown:

Another thing to mention-some sex workers are from other countries who stay here temporarily and then send their income back home which would actually be bad for our economy because money made would go towards their home countries economy rather than ours.

Offline Moby Dick

Would need to be legalised before tax could be collected.
Not all would earn enough to be VAT registered. If they charged VAT it would cost us more.
Not all would declare income for income tax / NI purposes.

1 hour with an SP costs way more than a good meal and a piss up or two.
Yet cheap £5 bottle of wine per night = £150 per month.
I think it would be quite easy to spend more seeing SPs than consuming £500 on alcohol per month, I think , hiccup , what was I saying, hiccup, yes please a double :drinks:




Offline puntingking

2014 In the first official study of money spent on 'illegal' activities it was found that Britons spend more on drugs and prostitutes than on beer and wine. The Office of National Statistics (ONS) said that spending on illegal drugs and prostitution was worth an estimated £12.3bn to the UK economy in 2013.

So let's do it.

Buy more grass, buy more arse, and we are on Easy Street, next year we'll be millionaires.  :lol:

External Link/Members Only

There is the link to the study your referring to.  :hi:

Offline Marmalade

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Legalising it, to the point of taxing it, would basically be a money grab.

‘Decriminalising’ so-called is what most prossies say they want and seems the most reasonable. Basically means it would no longer be an offence, but it’s such a vague term. You want laws to stop coercion, forced trafficking, underage, or causing a nuisance. But we don’t want the laws themselves abused.

Taxation (as in Melbourne and some other places) simply puts prices up.

Similarly weed has been ‘legalised’ in Canada, or parts of Canada, but the licensed distributors have a serious job competing on price with unlicensed ones apparently. Pointless?

Drugs genuinely associated with serious crime are drugs of addiction, injectables. One way to harness those would be to make them registered so users could be tracked. At the moment there’s a double standard. Johnny Depp snorts coke, like hundreds of other celebrities, and is savvy enough to avoid permanent addiction. Not hard. Why shouldn’t he? But Bigsby living in a Trashland Estate somewhere just snorts it till he runs out or else injects the stuff, brings problems.

Offline puntingking

Legalising it, to the point of taxing it, would basically be a money grab.

‘Decriminalising’ so-called is what most prossies say they want and seems the most reasonable. Basically means it would no longer be an offence, but it’s such a vague term. You want laws to stop coercion, forced trafficking, underage, or causing a nuisance. But we don’t want the laws themselves abused.

Taxation (as in Melbourne and some other places) simply puts prices up.

Similarly weed has been ‘legalised’ in Canada, or parts of Canada, but the licensed distributors have a serious job competing on price with unlicensed ones apparently. Pointless?

Drugs genuinely associated with serious crime are drugs of addiction, injectables. One way to harness those would be to make them registered so users could be tracked. At the moment there’s a double standard. Johnny Depp snorts coke, like hundreds of other celebrities, and is savvy enough to avoid permanent addiction. Not hard. Why shouldn’t he? But Bigsby living in a Trashland Estate somewhere just snorts it till he runs out or else injects the stuff, brings problems.

I agree. But presumably you pay your taxes. I also presume self employed hairdressers has to do their own taxes (well they should do anyway) also massage therapist that are self employed would have to aswell.  So you can't have the best of both worlds (or well we shouldn't anyway) expect to go to sex workers and want great services for great prices and then complain when people get away with paying tax for example  :unknown:

On the other hand there would be those that would be dead against the idea of sex workers paying taxes for their line of work because it could be seen as the government earning from people selling their bodies which is against government own laws.  :unknown:


Offline Marmalade

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I agree. But presumably you pay your taxes. I also presume self employed hairdressers has to do their own taxes (well they should do anyway) also massage therapist that are self employed would have to aswell.  So you can't have the best of both worlds (or well we shouldn't anyway) expect to go to sex workers and want great services for great prices and then complain when people get away with paying tax for example  :unknown:

On the other hand there would be those that would be dead against the idea of sex workers paying taxes for their line of work because it could be seen as the government earning from people selling their bodies which is against government own laws.  :unknown:

Whether SPs pay their taxes, or their full taxes, is not my business. I prefer places where prices are ridiculously cheap.