Yes, if I might. Certainly sex trafficking is exacerbated by poverty and economic desperation, but we do not find, in our experience, epidemic levels of sex trafficking whenever we find poverty in the world. You'll see endemic levels of poverty in different countries and different locations, but there are not the same levels of human trafficking, especially sex trafficking.
In fact, what we find is that sex trafficking flourishes on a large scale only in those countries or communities in which it is tolerated by local or national law enforcement, so it is simply not good enough to say that providing more international development assistance will in some way alleviate the problem.
I worked for four years with an international development organization and understand the critical need to provide that sort of assistance, but unless it's married up with a respect for the rule of law and respect for the rights of those individuals in those situations, they will have all that's given to them cherry-picked away from them. They will be deprived of their rights, and their freedom and their liberty will be circumscribed by others who have more economic, physical, legal, social, or political power than they to prey upon them; unless, through respect for the rule of law and through enforcement of the rights of these individuals, you restrain the hand of those who are oppressing these individuals, assistance that goes to them--just like graft and greed and corruption--can be diverted into the pockets of the traffickers and the pimps.