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"Freakonomics" Authors Tell You How to be a Good Prostitute

Posted by Sady Doyle, Comment Is Free at 2:30 PM on October 26, 2009.


The men behind "Freakonomics" offer a stunningly shallow and flawed view of sex work as a career option for women.
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Good news, ladies. You, too, can make millions by charging for sex! And you'll just have a slam-bang, gee-golly splendiferous time doing it, too -- at least if you absolutely adore the sort of men who pay for it. Be warned, however: Disliking those men will consign you to the minimum-wage ranks of sex professionals, forever longing for the big bucks you could be earning, had you only an appropriately chipper attitude.

Such is the advice of Steven Levitt and Stephen Dubner, of Freakonomics fame. They are back with a new book, Superfreakonomics, and recently they unveiled a bit of it in the form of an excerpt about how to succeed as a prostitute.

Freakonomics, of course, is the science of choosing an appropriately wacky or controversial subject (sumo wrestlers, abortion), applying a little economic analysis to it and coming up with a shocking conclusion that will make people blog about you. In that respect, the how-to-charge-for-sex piece was a no-brainer. Expressing any opinion about prostitution will bring on outrage (and attention) from one corner or another, no matter what your opinion turns out to be. Of course, if you are aiming for maximum impact, it helps to be -- as Levitt and Dubner are -- really, stunningly, remarkably wrong.

Levitt and Dubner build their piece around a comparison of two prostitutes: Allie, who works from her bedroom and makes between $350 and $500 an hour, depending on the client, and LaSheena, who works on the streets and probably makes about $350 a week, based on statistics (some information -- any information -- as to LaSheena's specific circumstances and earnings probably would have helped the comparison, but Levitt and Dubner seem, in this instance as in many others, not to have bothered learning about their subject).

LaSheena and Allie are the Goofus and Gallant of sex work, at least in the warped little scenario laid forth in the Superfreakonomics excerpt. Arising, as Levitt and Dubner seem to assume they do, from absolutely no context whatsoever (the fact that Allie is probably white, and that LaSheena is probably not, is never once addressed, for example; neither is the personal history of LaSheena explored in any detail, though we hear about Allie at excruciating length) they are not actual women so much as they are flattened-out, hollow caricatures of Success and Failure. Allie is a good prostitute; she has succeeded. LaSheena is a bad prostitute; she has failed.

What has LaSheena done wrong, you ask? Simple: She doesn't like being a prostitute. "I don't really like men," she is quoted as saying. This is an interesting statement, which the authors fail to follow up. Why doesn't LaSheena like men? Has she been beaten? Has she been raped? Is there a man taking a cut of her money? Was she forced into this job as a child by a man, by a boyfriend she loved, by sheer poverty? And has she seen the ugly side of men too often in this job to trust any?

Hey, here's an interesting thought: Maybe LaSheena doesn't like men because she's trapped in a cycle of poverty, and one of the only ways for her to stay alive is to have sex with men, whether or not she really wants to. Maybe that's enough to make LaSheena dislike men. We'll never know, however, because Dubner and Levitt don't ask. They don't care to humanise her. She's the Goofus in the scenario. Her poverty -- which is assumed to be entirely her fault -- is only there to provide a counterpoint to Allie's shining example.

Boy, oh, boy, does Allie ever love being a prostitute! Why, do you know that she just went ahead and did it on a whim, as a sexy adventure, and not because of any nasty old compelling factors like poverty or addiction or a man literally arranging for her to be raped over and over again and taking money from her rapists or anything like that? Well, it's true. The Freakonomics gentlemen said so!

They make a point of letting us know that Allie "liked men, and she liked sex." And do you know what men she especially likes? Why, her clients, of course. Allie "is the kind of person who sees something good in everyone". Isn't that nice? She credits this for the fact that she is so successful -- and so do Levitt and Dubner.

Say, here's another nicety that Levitt and Dubner genuinely thought was a sane and intelligent thing to write down and publish: Allie's clients "treat her, in many ways, as men are expected to treat their wives but often don't". And Allie, in return, is like the "ideal wife", who "is happy to see you every time you show up at her door. Your favorite music is already playing, and your favourite drink is on ice. She will never ask you to take out the rubbish."

How this qualifies as wifely behavior, outside of reruns of "Father Knows Best," is unclear. But Levitt and Dubner seem genuinely convinced that this one-sided scenario of happy subjugation and infantile, pampered narcissism is good for everyone involved. Allie gets a MacBook! Doesn't that prove that it's working?

Levitt and Dubner seem, at some point along the line, to have missed out on the fact that women have inner lives, lives which do not revolve entirely around servicing men and which may in fact require some servicing by men along the way. It's evident in the way they extol Allie for getting such unmitigated joy out of subjugating herself to her clients.

It's also clear in the fact that they praise prostitution for allowing men to have sex without the "the potential costs of an unwanted pregnancy." (Well, no, sex with prostitutes did not carry the potential costs of an unwanted pregnancy, for men. In fact, I've noticed that very few men tend to get pregnant as the result of sex, whether with prostitutes or with anyone else. Perhaps Levitt and Dubner can take some time, in their forthcoming book Superduperultrafreakonomics, to puzzle that one out for us.)

It's clear in the way that they classify women who do not charge for sex as "competition" to prostitutes -- as if those women were offering the same, or even comparable, experiences, and as if Levitt and Dubner genuinely cannot believe that sex is not a service performed for men by women, but a thing that women do for their own satisfaction.

It's most clearly, cruelly evident in the way they blame LaSheena for her own poverty – placing the credit for it not on any of the multiple obstacles she may have had to overcome, but on the fact that she simply doesn't love to be a prostitute the way Allie does. Deep down, there is the assumption that servicing a man is all a woman can reasonably aspire to, and that those who don't love to do it are somehow faulty.

And as for how much Allie loves to be a prostitute ... well, we don't have her direct testimony, do we? What we have is the word of two best-selling authors, which has been edited into book form. Allie's story is so romanticised that it seems unlikely the authors bore no agenda in their interviews -- or that Allie, a woman whose job is to figure out what men want from her, was unaware of it.

It's entirely possible that, faced with a couple of men who very clearly wanted one specific version of her story, she sized them up and did the same thing for them that she did for all her other clients. That is to say, she told them what they wanted to hear.

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Tagged as: prostitution, sex work, freakonomics, steven levitt, stephen dubner, superfreakonomics


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half right
Posted by: M. on Oct 26, 2009 5:10 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The original article does seem to be profoundly incurious about the low end prostitute and full of detail about the high end prostitute. In the end it turns out that she is a colleague! A fellow economist!

I find that tale of Allie to be reasonably plausible. It is possible to believe that women with such attitudes exist and have experiences such as she has.

But the article is useless as an explanation of "normal prostitution". As economists the freakanomics authors should be explaining how lower rate prostitutes begin, continue, survive, and end their careers as prostitutes. How does the middle and low end of the market operate? I think we can safely assume that low end operators are not in a position to simply decide they love men and therefore charge more.

Even if we concede that women and men have a "right" to sell sex, we are under no obligation to concede that it is WISE for them to exercise this right. Often (I'd bet) the decision to exercise that right is made for reasons of abuse, impaired judgment, severe economic conditions... in short it is not a freely willed "decision" in a conventional sense, with an actor who exercises free will concerning market entry and market exit. Rather it is a person who is already impaired as a free market actor slipping into an economic activity that is in some ways related to slavery... the will is paralyzed and the person (usually woman) is trapped.

So I don't think the freaknomics authors have begun to describe the normative issues in prostitution. Instead they've taken the easy case, the high end prostitute, which because of her obvious mental health and empowerment in many ways resembles a normal economic player in a free market, and hinted unjustly that her situation has something to do with the low end and middle market prostitutes.

That is an insidious suggestion and one that serious research would likely reveal as a distortion and misrepresentation of reality.

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» RE: half right Posted by: AlexaD
» RE: half right Posted by: Celtic Tiger
» RE: half right Posted by: AlexaD
» RE: half right Posted by: CharlesRoland
Freakonomics
Posted by: kepstein7777 on Oct 27, 2009 3:39 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It's the perfect metaphor for how the system works, or doesn't work, depending on your circumstances and tolerance for compromise. It's blame-the-victim repackaged as "positive thinking" or "self-help"...or Reaganomics.

If you have the right attitude, you can have all of the success you dream of. And by "right attitude", it means you have to demean yourself to make your resume stand out, to get that interview, to get that entry-level job, and kiss your way up to the corner office. In other words, be a good ho and good things will come to you. And if you find yourself digging ditches or scrubbing floors, it means you just need to work harder and smile more.

The funny thing is that some guys are so delusional or full of themselves that they'd pay top dollar to be patronized. There's a great episode of "Two and a Half Men" where Alan orders a call girl, but scares her away because he has trouble believing all of the sweet talk.

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» RE: Freakonomics Posted by: La Colombetta
Since when...
Posted by: La Colombetta on Oct 27, 2009 6:46 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
have Americans ever had an 'inner life' to speak of? They are relentless Capitalists, so in theory, it would be counter-productive to have one.

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When the "free market"
Posted by: littlepitcher on Oct 27, 2009 6:48 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...is controlled by organized crime, including organized male chauvinism, then we endure the serious wage inequalities exemplified by a semi-skilled worker who makes $200/hour in comparison to a semi-skilled worker who makes $200 a week in a convenience store or other retail outlet. Both are performing retail sales, both require "relationship" or customer service skills, both require undemanding physical labor. Both jobs entail a risk of physical violence or death.

Adult prostitution should be legalized, licensed, inspected.
Comparable work should have equal wages.
Now, what do we have to do to accomplish this?

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SADY DOESN'T GET IT
Posted by: VZEQICVA on Oct 27, 2009 7:16 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It's not about conscience, race, and "probably" is not a word that fits into their type of research. If you read the original "Freakonomics" they give the same camparison on the success or failure of people selling drugs such as crack cocaine. Very few at the top, and many at or near the bottom supporting those at the top. That's just the way it is. ANNA

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Leave it to the Freakonomics guys to screw up even the ...
Posted by: peterjkraus on Oct 27, 2009 7:40 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
... most basic economic activity. And, being who they are, all the "facts" are manufactured at their own kitchen table. Econ 101 for Dummies, with a little racism (winner "Allie", loser "LaSheena", indeed) chucked in.

What a pathetic bunch of shit.

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Prostitution should be legal
Posted by: vasumurti on Oct 27, 2009 7:43 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Prostitution should be legal. Someone once commented that using attractive women in advertising--magazines, billboards, etc. (what to speak of women stripping, working in topless bars or merely posing nude!) is a subtle form of prostitution--women using their bodies for income.

Tracy Clark-Flory writes in Salon.com:

"At $25-$30 per hour, prostitutes make approximately four times what they likely would outside of the sex industry. Of course, that doesn't take into consideration on-the-job risks like contracting an STD (condoms were used in only a quarter of dealings) or being assaulted; researchers estimate that sex workers are assaulted an average of once a month. There's also the threat of being arrested, but according to the Economist, 'Prostitutes are more likely to have sex with a police officer than to be arrested by one.'"

Problems such as contracting STDs, being assaulted, pimp violence, etc. would not exist if prostitution were legal. Prostitution was legal in ancient India for the same reason the Prohibition of alcohol failed in the United States.

Commenting on Srimad Bhagavatam 1.11.19, A.C. Bhaktivedanta Swami writes:

"By tricks of chance, one may be obliged to adopt a profession which is not very adorable in society...even in those days, about five thousand years ago, there were prostitutes in a city like Dwarka...This means that prostitutes are necessary citizens for the proper upkeep of society. The government opens wine shops, but this does not mean that the government encourages the drinking of wine. The idea is that there is a class of men who will drink at any cost, and it has been experienced that prohibition in great cities encouraged illicit smuggling of wine.

"Similarly, men who are not satisfied at home require such concessions...It is better that prostitutes be available in the marketplace so that the sanctity of society can be maintained."

I'm a pro-life Democrat, but even some conservatives concede that prostitution can be victimless. In a 1995 column entitled "Prostitution as a Privacy Right," Robert Craig Paul, a syndicated columnist for the Washington Times, wrote:

"If a woman's right to control the use of her reproductive organs permits her to enter into a cash transaction with an abortionist, then how can this fundamental right of privacy not apply to other transactions involving her use of her body?

"...abortion has been against the law and restricted with greater intensity for more of our history than prostitution, reflecting social norms that abortion, viewed as infanticide, is more immoral than prostitution...

"In contrast (to abortion), prostitution is entirely an act between consenting parties that does not affect the bodily integrity, identity and destiny of a third party (the unborn)...

"It is legal nonsense that privacy conveys the right to abort, but not the right to ingest drugs or engage in sodomy...

"It will be interesting to watch the court sort out on the basis of Roe v. Wade why it is legal for a woman to contract for abortion but not prostitution."

Again, prostitution should be legal.

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» "I'm a pro-life Democrat...." Posted by: morticia
Why Use a Hammer to Screw?
Posted by: ffrf.org on Oct 27, 2009 8:19 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
You gladly tell the authors of superfreakanomics what questions they aren't asking.

they aren't asking the history of the lower class prostitute, who's racial background might be important.

they aren't asking why LaSheena doesn't like men, she's probably been beaten.

-----

so. they aren't asking those questions because it really doesn't matter to the questions they are answering. yes, if you want to do womens studies 101 level analysis: the poor women is black. poverty and violence are problems she must overcome.

that's the narrative we know.

superfreakanomics goes further than just "be a white whore and youll be better off", it looks at aggregates: you're better off being a white, drug-free prostitute than a mid-level office worker, some things considered. and that, given their predominately white, college educated readership, is interesting and good for cocktail parties.

they part you don't want to talk about, however, is their entrepreneur-centric approach to global problems.

it might make a progressive out of a liberal.

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caveman
Posted by: wolfbite on Oct 27, 2009 8:39 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Sady doesnt get it, and prolly never will.

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"LaSheena"... sigh
Posted by: Gabba_Gabba_Hey on Oct 27, 2009 9:15 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Although this made me think of the prostitute on "Curb Your Enthusiasm," the one who Larry, a rich guy in a hurry, picked up simply to qualify as a two-person vehicle for the diamond lane -- Freakanomics indeed! -- and ended up treating her to a game at Dodger Stadium, hot dogs included. After that, she sold some pot to Larry's glaucomic father. Funniest episode of that show ever!

She seemed to like men fine, even though she was black and was "just" a streetwalker.

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Judgments
Posted by: ann83 on Oct 27, 2009 10:38 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
First off, Leavitt is an economist. Not a psychotherapist, not a social worker, not a psychologist. He is discussing business models, not whether or not someone is happy in the work they do. Not all prostitutes are unhappy or were beaten as children, although some are. Let's leave it at that. Not all lawyers were unhappy or beaten as children, although some are. You could probably insert any profession in there.

In fact, neither LaSheena, nor Allie are the normative prostitute. The normative prostitute is not a streetwalker (10-20% as indicated in the Dept of Justice) nor is a high end call girl (don't have any statistics on that, but it's probably not that high). They are usually average women, and men who advertise online or in personal ads. But, we have to remember the Freakonomics guys use extreme examples to illustrate their points. They do want money!

And, as an aside, I believe women (and men, and transgendered individuals) enter prostitution through three ways. Choice, coercion or circumstance. If they enter by choice, we need to respect this choice. If they enter by coercion, and desire to leave the industry, then by all means should we do what we can to get them out. If they enter by circumstance, then we should work to improve their circumstances through workforce development and education. Women and men who enter prostitution by circumstance or coercion are the ones who we should (if they so desire) "help". But please, let's not extrapolate their experiences to those who choose to enter prostitution. If someone is happy in the life they chose, and they are not hurting anyone, then let's not tell them they can't be happy!

At the same time, "empowered" prostitutes should not extrapolate their positive experiences to those at the lower rungs of society. But, treating women as victims too, does a disservice to feminism, which has always clamored for equality.

Sorry, just a little rant there.

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Reactionary economist
Posted by: halrivers on Oct 27, 2009 4:29 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Freakonomics is just a way to show people that what they intuitively believe should be done to make an economy more just will always have the opposite effect. Freaky buy true.
It's a cover for reactionary capitalism, that's all.

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What a romp!
Posted by: DaBear on Oct 27, 2009 5:05 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Sady delivers a total smackdown. I loved it.

FWIW, I thought Freakonomics was satire or at least dark, very crass humor. I assume Superfreakonomics is no different. Mileage may vary... course after petro-collapse mileage won't fuckin' matter any more, will it?

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Click-onomics
Posted by: ecogazoo on Oct 27, 2009 5:17 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Here's some serious economics for ye:

I VOW never to click through some absurd sex-related headline on Alternet again.

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Ignore these idiots and they'll go away
Posted by: Erik1968 on Oct 28, 2009 2:11 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"Expressing any opinion about prostitution will bring on outrage (and attention) from one corner or another, no matter what your opinion turns out to be."

And, here it is. Why? Just ignore them.

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prostitution did not cause this
Posted by: cypriot on Oct 28, 2009 7:04 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Please do not confuse cause with effect. Even if LaSheena was abused in the past, prostitution did not cause that abuse. Here is an analogy: rape crisis centers have women in them who have been raped, but the rape crisis centers did not cause that rape. Prostitution is so disreputable that most of the women who do it are desperate. If prostitution were eliminated, that would not eliminate the desperate circumstances, any more than eliminating rape crisis centers would eliminate rape. I have seen prostitutes on TV say they had been raped and that prostitution gave them a feeling of empowerment because it was the opposite of rape.

As far as earning more money if you like your customers, that is no different than many occupations. For example, waitresses who are friendly with their customers probably get bigger tips.

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Any woman who has more than 2.5 partners per annum...
Posted by: davmills on Oct 28, 2009 8:40 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
..is called a "whore" (not by me-private behaviour is exactly that). Perhaps when the double standard disappears (perhaps never), so might prostitution.

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Sady Doyle's Prudery
Posted by: tddrker on Oct 31, 2009 2:04 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Sady says:

"It's entirely possible that, faced with a couple of men who very clearly wanted one specific version of her story, she sized them up and did the same thing for them that she did for all her other clients. That is to say, she told them what they wanted to hear."

Sady claims that she is criticizing the authors of the book, but she is actually criticizing the prostitute. Sady is clearly threatened by an articulate, well-paid sex worker.

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Thought Experiments
Posted by: cdmsr on Nov 1, 2009 12:41 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Surely no one believes these guys actually interviewed prostitutes for their book.

When Einstein was working on his theories he used what he called 'Thought Experiments' to explore the effects of his mental constructs in the real world. Imagining a man in an elevator undergoing different conditions helped him relate acceleration to gravity.

I am not calling these guys Einstein -- I am not impressed by what passes as thought in their work -- but this is obviously a 'Thought Experiment'. The women, their circumstances and their respective attitudes are imaginary constructs devised to 'prove' the writers' likely-flawed preconceptions.

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links of london
Posted by: linksoflondon00 on Nov 6, 2009 4:43 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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