Rynar wrote:
People go into busines to make money, RD. When it becomes impossible to make money, you close your doors. Doctors are bright people, RD. They have tons of options when it comes to employment.
True, but in most cases, they'll have very few options that are going to pay anything close to what they'll be able to make as doctors even if their compensation does take a hit from reform.
It's like all the wailing and moaning my fellow Big Law associates engaged in last year when firms froze salaries, slashed bonuses and reduced recruitment incentives because of the recession. Everyone pitched a fit about how it was no longer worth all the years of schooling, insane work hours, soul-crushing partners, etc., how firms were going to find it hard to attract top candidates away from investment banking and other professions, and of course how deeply unfair it all was!
And then reality set in. People realized that a $60,000 pay cut may sting, but it's still damn hard to find any other jobs that pay $160-300k per year. Everyone who didn't get canned, stayed put; most who did get canned continued to apply for other Big Law jobs; and law school applications went up yet again.
I strongly suspect it's the same deal in the medical profession. Sure, it'd suck for a doctor who goes from making $250k to making only $175k, but when he actually looks at his options and sees that being an analyst at some biotech firm will pay half that much, if he's lucky, and that it's unclear whether he can even get that job with no lab, investment, or management experience, he's probably going to suck it up and keep his little white coat.
Which isn't to say I don't sympathize or that I agree with government price-setting. It's just that I'm very skeptical of the idea that doctors are going to quit en masse if health care reform passes.