April 25, 2005
Immigrant Doctors
Aren’t Necessary Either
Move over computer programmers.
Medical doctors are also alleged to be in
"short supply" these days. Meaning that we
must import them from abroad—right?
Wrong.
Foreign-born physicians now make up approximately 23
percent of the total U.S. physician count, up from 17
percent in 1970. [Table 1]
Most foreign doctors come here on
the J-1 program. Like its H-1b cousin, (see my
H-1b analysis), J-1 is a
guest worker visa.
The visa stipulates that doctors
must return to their native countries after completing
their hospital residency, and practice there before
applying to return to the U.S.
But most
don't go back: A loophole allows them to stay if
they are hired by a
hospital in a
rural or inner city neighborhood.
And public policy has stimulated
demand in exactly this area.
Medicare provides a
massive subsidy for hospital residency slots.
Data suggests that a resident is
worth $70,000 a year to a teaching hospital. There are
24,000 such positions underwritten by Medicare —roughly
9,000 more than the number of MD degrees awarded
annually by U.S. medical schools.
But at the same time, public policy
has damaged the supply of American doctors.
It starts in medical school. We do
little to help finance medical education in this
country. By contrast, many foreign doctors are educated
here, or in their home country, at heavily subsidized
tuitions.
And American medical schools are
expensive. The estimated total cost of four years
attendance comes to approximately $140,000 for public
schools and $225,000 for private schools. Although
consumer prices are less than twice what they were 20
years ago, debt carried by the average medical graduate
is 4.8-times higher.
At the same time
dwindling insurance reimbursements, higher
malpractice premiums (and increased competition from
foreign doctors) have reduced the income that
U.S.-born doctors can reasonably expect over their
working lifetime.
And, although U.S.
medical schools are graduating about the same number
of doctors as twenty years ago, the gender distribution
has changed dramatically— possibly as a result of
affirmative action. Women have gone from less than a
quarter of graduates to almost a half (Table 2). But
many
women graduates do not practice medicine full time
if at all. Many
quit medicine when their children are born.
Men generally don't have that
luxury. They are avoiding
medical school, as they are avoiding
science and engineering generally, largely because
the once-lofty economic returns simply aren't there any
more.
This demand-supply gap has produced
foreign medical schools in which every student plans to
come to the U.S.—and U.S. hospitals that happily snap up
every foreign applicant.
The truth: we probably have too
many doctors. Funds spent on medical residency programs
would be better spent helping Americans pay for medical
school and increasing the pay for MDs who serve
rural communities and
inner-city neighborhoods.
The market for doctors is distorted
by public policy. The mass immigration of foreign
doctors is both a cause and an unnecessary and expensive
consequence.
[Number fans
click here for tables.]
Edwin S. Rubenstein (email
him) is President of
ESR Research Economic Consultants in Indianapolis.