Counter-productive subsidy of medical schools
- Perverse subsidies for failure to train doctors
- Disincentives to train physicians
Nature
Medical schools in some countries receive government subsidies for training doctors. The schools have trained more doctors than are needed to serve local patients. In order to reduce the glut of doctors, the government has told the medical schools to train fewer doctors. The medical schools have claimed that they depend on the subsidies to operate, and so the government is now paying medical schools not to train doctors.
Incidence
Subsidies for not training doctors were awarded in 1997 in the USA.
Broader
Aggravated by
Strategy
SDG
Metadata
Database
World problems
Type
(G) Very specific problems
Subject
Medicine » Medicine
Transportation, telecommunications » Railways
Commerce » Finance
Societal problems » Failure
Societal problems » Maltreatment
Health care » Physicians
Education » Schools
Economics » Productivity
Content quality
Presentable
Language
English
Last update
Nov 25, 2022