It is complicated to answer this because yes, you get paid more but...it is also cost and earning inflation like someone else already said.
And there are several errors in the question itself..
In the United States, a doctor’s first year after medical school is not a fully paid, independent position. it’s an actual residency. That is different in other countries where you don't need specialty to be hired as a general doctor.
A first year resident PGY-1 typically earns around $55,000 $70,000 per year (roughly $4,500 $6,000/month before tax).
That might sound high compared to other countries, but it comes with important circumstances. They work 60 80 hours per week. They carry massive student debt (often $200,000–$400,000)..The cost of living, insurance, and malpractice coverage is very high compared to Africa..in fact in Africa it can be non-existent because the cost is covered by the government itself.
The residents are also still in training, not fully autonomous physicians. They are still paying for their education.
So they are not simply “earning more than $3,000 right out of school.” They’ve gone through 10+ years of education and are still underpaid relative to their workload at that stage.
But of course, there is more to this. From my own experience working in Algeria and Canada, the difference is less about “medicine pays more in the U.S.” and more about how the entire system is structured.
It is money-oriented.
Your healthcare system is extremely expensive and highly privatized. Doctors’ salaries AFTER RESIDENCY are higher partly because the entire system charges more ;consultations, procedures, insurance billing, everything.. just a reminder, I am talking about after residency..not the comparison you listed here
And then there is the cost of training, in countries like China or South Africa, medical education is often subsidized. In contrast, your doctors graduate with enormous debt, which drives higher salaries later..In the U.S., the big salaries you hear about ($200k–$400k+) come after residency, again, once physicians become attendings. That is very different from a first-year doctor. Incredibly different. And it is true, he would make much more money by then in the US..
And there are several errors in the question itself..
In the United States, a doctor’s first year after medical school is not a fully paid, independent position. it’s an actual residency. That is different in other countries where you don't need specialty to be hired as a general doctor.
A first year resident PGY-1 typically earns around $55,000 $70,000 per year (roughly $4,500 $6,000/month before tax).
That might sound high compared to other countries, but it comes with important circumstances. They work 60 80 hours per week. They carry massive student debt (often $200,000–$400,000)..The cost of living, insurance, and malpractice coverage is very high compared to Africa..in fact in Africa it can be non-existent because the cost is covered by the government itself.
The residents are also still in training, not fully autonomous physicians. They are still paying for their education.
So they are not simply “earning more than $3,000 right out of school.” They’ve gone through 10+ years of education and are still underpaid relative to their workload at that stage.
But of course, there is more to this. From my own experience working in Algeria and Canada, the difference is less about “medicine pays more in the U.S.” and more about how the entire system is structured.
It is money-oriented.
Your healthcare system is extremely expensive and highly privatized. Doctors’ salaries AFTER RESIDENCY are higher partly because the entire system charges more ;consultations, procedures, insurance billing, everything.. just a reminder, I am talking about after residency..not the comparison you listed here
And then there is the cost of training, in countries like China or South Africa, medical education is often subsidized. In contrast, your doctors graduate with enormous debt, which drives higher salaries later..In the U.S., the big salaries you hear about ($200k–$400k+) come after residency, again, once physicians become attendings. That is very different from a first-year doctor. Incredibly different. And it is true, he would make much more money by then in the US..
Jokerssswild · 22-25, MNew
@Miram I didn’t realize med school in the United States was so expensive. Earning $6,000 a month in the U.S. is inferior to earning $3,000 a month in South Africa. $3,000 a month could allow someone in South Africa to live in luxury, but $6,000 a month in the U.S. is only a little above average, and the average American struggles to pay their bills.
Magicianzini · M
Most I know/have known start at around 120K. That quickly escalates though. Your friend can't just become a doctor here. It doesn't work like that. There would be quite a number of steps he would have to go through first.
lissah · 36-40, F
Depends what they specialize in. But most doctors in their first year i think average $100,000.
DeWayfarer · 61-69, M
You got to be kidding. Just getting through immigration would be bad enough. Yet having to go through training and qualifying as a doctor in the USA is way beyond his means.
ViciDraco · 41-45, M
What kind of lifestyle do those wages afford them in each nation? The local cost of living really matters in these situations.
Jayciedubb · 56-60, M
The wages are higher because the cost of living is higher. There's really no way around it. Even if someone could live in china and be a doctor in US, the time and gas it would take to get back n forth would far offset any possible advantage
jackrabbit10 · M
yell a day.
GoFish ·
they made a lot here but also many of them have major student loan debts as well
Ok but what does it cost to become a doctor in the different countries?
TheOneyouwerewarnedabout · 46-50, MVIP
Because they’re not doctors.
They big pharmaceutical representatives who live on bonus payments
They big pharmaceutical representatives who live on bonus payments













