Third of Berlin university students consider sex work

By Eric Kelsey | Reuters – Wed, 18 May, 2011
 
- The red light district in the northern German town
        BERLIN (Reuters Life!) - One in three university students in the  German capital would consider sex work as a means to finance their  education, a study from the Berlin Studies Center said Wednesday.
 The figure in Berlin, where prostitution is legal, was higher than  students surveyed in Paris (29.2 percent) and in Kiev (18.5 percent),  the three cities the report looked at.
 The study found some 4 percent of the 3,200 Berlin students surveyed  said they had already done some form of sex work, which includes  prostitution, erotic dancing and Internet shows.
 
The number of men who said they would consider sex work was about equal to the number of woman, the study found.
 
The results surprised the study's authors, who said they undertook  the study because student prostitution had been often reported but  little was known about its relationship to education policy.
 
"The main motivation of students to turn to prostitution were the  financial incentives, namely the high hourly wages," Eva Blumenschein,  one of the study's authors and a 26-year-old student at Berlin's  Humboldt University, told Reuters.
 
Blumenschein said recent educational reforms aimed at speeding up  students' time at university may play a role in them seeking out sex  work.
 
"It's possible that because educational reforms have increased  student workloads, they have less time to earn money," she said.  "Coupled with higher student fees, in this instance, leads students into  prostitution."
 Thirty percent of students working in the sex industry were in debt, the study found.
 
That compared with 18 percent of students who said they would consider sex work who were in debt.
 (Editing by Paul Casciato)