The Nordic model is criminalisation of sex work via criminalising buyers. It comes with significant hardship and oppression directed at sex workers (cf
this briefing paper from the Swedish Rose Alliance and Australian Scarlet Alliance).
It's quite different in form and intent from both regulation/selective legalisation approaches and genuine decriminalisation.
Well, the 2008 NIKK report give the figures of about 300 street prostitute, and 350 persons engaged in escort services, in Sweden.
That was about a decade after the introduction of the legislation. In preparation for the legislation change a govt survey (SOU 1995:15) in 1995 estimated the number of prostitutes in Sweden to be in the range of 2500-3000.
Right or wrong, prostitution is a pretty peripheral phenomenon in Swedish society.
So much so, the Swedish chapter of the Rose Alliance, Rosa alliansen, seems to be defunct since 2014. There just isn't that many prostitutes to organise, who need an organisation like that, or for that matter can provide a sufficient pool of people to draw upon to maintain a formal organisation.
Now, if one wants very large numbers of prostitutes in society, that might be troubling? Personally, I don't feel any particular freedom lost here?
The wonderful world of the internet in Sweden does provide TONS of opportunities for casual sex hook-ups all kinds of prerefences catered to. It's just not supposed to be any money changing hands. Now, that might in the final instance turn out to be something negotiable, depending on the individuals involved. And clearly the rest of us will never know.
The thing about Sweden is that people getting it on in general is not regarded as either extraordinary or troubling. It's the involvement of money that is seen as dirtying the sex. They remuneration angle totally goes against what has been labeled "the Swedish theory of love". People can do what they like, provided individuals don't enter into relationships based on material dependency or monetary interest.
There are polls with anonymously self reported figures for paying for prostitutes' services (any time in life). According to those in the period 1996 to 2008 the number of men who reported to have done so at some point dropped from 12,7% to 7,6%. there would seem to be a rapid decrease going on.
Otoh just last week the govt issued a statement to the effect that the Swedish National Health Agency is about to be given the task of cunducting a huge survey of Swedish sexual practices. There's a fear, and anecdotal testimony, that the daily grind of modern life, general increased stress levels, might have made Swedes have less sex? That's officially a problem at government level at this point.
Nothing indicates more prostitution might come under political consideration as part of a remedy of course. But quite possibly it might be included among the things properly looked into?
