I would like to say a few things.
What you want to do is eliminate the criminal and exploitive parts of it, the human rights violations parts of it. I think that's what I was getting at when I said that the increased focus on criminalization doesn't address that issue, which is the exploitive nature of it and all the associated criminal aspects that adhere to all these problems.
When you're talking about the problem, one of the difficulties we have is that there are very few legitimate routes of migration for women into this country. Many women don't qualify under the skilled worker point system, particularly if they come from countries where women are significantly disadvantaged. They are not going to have the higher education; they are not going to have the skills to qualify. They have only a very limited ability to migrate under the domestic worker program, which has its own problems with potential forced labour, isolation of the women, and the live-in requirement--which we've been advocating be removed for many years.
So you're right. You're saying that the demand will continue to be there. But there are things that can be done to reduce demand. One is to make it entirely socially unacceptable. One is to remove all the criminal activity that surrounds the demand. Partly, you do that by removing the criminal stigma from it.