Venezuela's months-long economic crisis has worsened, with citizens scrambling to get access to everything from condoms to toilet paper, and now, Venezuelan women are turning to prostitution to get by, a new report from Fusion suggests.

Prostitution is legal in Colombia, which is where more and more Venezuelan women are going to work. According to Fusion's Manuel Rueda, most women head to places like Cucuta, a busy border town, for a few days of work before heading back home to Venezuela. "There's nothing to do in Venezuela," a woman named Alondre told Rueda. "What we have there is a dictatorship."

Another woman, Jennifer, says that in Colombia, she can charge 50,000 Colombian pesos — equivalent to about $22 U.S. dollars — for 20 minutes of sex. The monthly minimum wage in Venezuela is about $21 and falling as the value of the Venezuelan bolivar plummets.

"I have my own business in Venezuela, but you can't make any money there," she told Fusion. "With a week of work here, I can make more than I can make there in a month."

Although the Colombian government is cracking down on undocumented sex workers, saying it wants to stop the spread of STDs, it's easy to cross over the border from Venezuela to Cucuta, with only a bridge separating the two and no officials checking documents at the border.

Other Venezuelan women aren't just selling sex — they're selling money. A 2014 Bloomberg story found that prostitutes near places like Puerto Cabello, a Venezuelan port town, could double their earnings by being paid in dollars from visiting foreign tourists and then selling the dollars to local businesses for bolivares at high rates. One woman, Giselle, said she could make more in two hours as a prostitute in Puerto Cabello than working a month doing anything else.

"What would we do now if we stopped?" Giselle told Bloomberg. "Work for a minimum wage that doesn't even pay for food? If we wouldn't be here working the scene, we would be living on the streets."

Follow Alanna on Twitter.

This content is created and maintained by a third party, and imported onto this page to help users provide their email addresses. You may be able to find more information about this and similar content at piano.io