Dilbert_X
The X stands for
+1,817|6411|eXtreme to the maX
Sorry but I'm just not interested in hearing Doctors complaining about not having enough money.
If they'd like to take a pay cut that might move them down a tax bracket.

Last edited by Dilbert_X (2008-10-21 06:25:33)

Fuck Israel
FEOS
Bellicose Yankee Air Pirate
+1,182|6716|'Murka

PureFodder wrote:

FEOS wrote:

No, there's also massive amounts of college loans that must be paid off, as well.

I'm not saying doctors are barely getting by. They make gobs of money. Never implied otherwise.
But the same is true in other countries. US doctors are paid about twice that of European doctors. If this was due to the neccessity of paying off their college fees, their college fees would have to be approximately $2-3 million dollars in excess of the college fees in Europe to account for all of the extra money they get paid, assuming they work for 30 years at the national average wage for a doctor. US doctors earn large amounts of money and neither law suits or college fees even remotely account for the differences in typical US and European doctors pay.

The only sensible reason for the high salaries of US doctors is the lack of competition that is directly due to the number of residencies that congress funds each year.
Which types of doctors are you referring to? Salaries vary widely among specialties.
“Everybody is a genius. But if you judge a fish by its ability to climb a tree, it will live its whole life believing that it is stupid.”
― Albert Einstein

Doing the popular thing is not always right. Doing the right thing is not always popular
Turquoise
O Canada
+1,596|6710|North Carolina
Oh well, the most overpaid doctors in the world are about to see a drop in income.  Somehow, sympathy escapes me.

Here's to hoping insurance agents, CEOs, entertainers, pro sports players, and lawyers are the next to see drops.
imortal
Member
+240|6970|Austin, TX

GorillaTicTacs wrote:

Besides, at that income level, Obama's tax plan works better than ever.  You'll be pretty much tax free.  I don't see you climbing your way into the top 5% of the US incomes very soon.
Yeah, but a big help it does to lower my taxes if my boss has to fire me to reduce overhead. 

Granted, I am in a pretty recession-proof job, and I have made damn sure it is not MY head that will be first on the chopping block to go (when in doubt, work hard to make yourself one of the very best employees).  But, even though I am nowhere near the top of the income pyramid, it is not hard to realize that taking more money away from the people using that money to create jobs and products (which is what really keeps the economy going) is most likely not the smartest thing to do.

In my opinion, the entire strategy is nothing more than a tactic to 'buy' the much more numerous votes of the 'poor' at the expense of the relativesly few 'rich' in order to obtain and maintain political power at any cost.  No, I do not think that the Republicans are any more honest, but I get tired of people wrapping shit in rose petals and trying to sell it as a flower (how is that for an image?).
Turquoise
O Canada
+1,596|6710|North Carolina

imortal wrote:

GorillaTicTacs wrote:

Besides, at that income level, Obama's tax plan works better than ever.  You'll be pretty much tax free.  I don't see you climbing your way into the top 5% of the US incomes very soon.
Yeah, but a big help it does to lower my taxes if my boss has to fire me to reduce overhead. 

Granted, I am in a pretty recession-proof job, and I have made damn sure it is not MY head that will be first on the chopping block to go (when in doubt, work hard to make yourself one of the very best employees).  But, even though I am nowhere near the top of the income pyramid, it is not hard to realize that taking more money away from the people using that money to create jobs and products (which is what really keeps the economy going) is most likely not the smartest thing to do.

In my opinion, the entire strategy is nothing more than a tactic to 'buy' the much more numerous votes of the 'poor' at the expense of the relativesly few 'rich' in order to obtain and maintain political power at any cost.  No, I do not think that the Republicans are any more honest, but I get tired of people wrapping shit in rose petals and trying to sell it as a flower (how is that for an image?).
After the bailout of Wall Street, I'd say it's time for payback.
SealXo
Member
+309|6841

Turquoise wrote:

Oh well, the most overpaid doctors in the world are about to see a drop in income.  Somehow, sympathy escapes me.

Here's to hoping insurance agents, CEOs, entertainers, pro sports players, and lawyers are the next to see drops.
Don't forget the people with no education that worked for decades to earn their money. Those guys are hiding out too.
Turquoise
O Canada
+1,596|6710|North Carolina

SealXo wrote:

Turquoise wrote:

Oh well, the most overpaid doctors in the world are about to see a drop in income.  Somehow, sympathy escapes me.

Here's to hoping insurance agents, CEOs, entertainers, pro sports players, and lawyers are the next to see drops.
Don't forget the people with no education that worked for decades to earn their money. Those guys are hiding out too.
Are you referring to illegals?
SealXo
Member
+309|6841

Turquoise wrote:

SealXo wrote:

Turquoise wrote:

Oh well, the most overpaid doctors in the world are about to see a drop in income.  Somehow, sympathy escapes me.

Here's to hoping insurance agents, CEOs, entertainers, pro sports players, and lawyers are the next to see drops.
Don't forget the people with no education that worked for decades to earn their money. Those guys are hiding out too.
Are you referring to illegals?
No, but I am referring to immigrants.. sort of.

My grandpa was poor as shit, his dad was a lithuanian immigrant, he did back breaking work in canada from the time he was 13-20 to save up to go to Columbia to get an education in DESIGN. Then he took his wife, and his kid, to CA, with 300 dollars in his pocket, legally. Then he gave up being a father to work for about ten years to sell church materials and drove across the country barely ever home. Hard life id say.. especially since hes a jew. Then, he used all that money he spent years away from home to create his own business (nothing to do with design) to make money. He worked at this 12 hours a day 7 days a week and saved, literally, every dime he ever made. A few decades later of constant working, he bought a few buildings which he now rents out on top of other things he invested in and he went from 300 dollars to uhm... quite a bit.

I don't see how its fairness to see how a man who gave up everything, even his family for awhile, and worked all his life going through the shit to give someone else a free lunch.

almost 60 years he worked his ass off to get where he is. he didnt do that to keep less then half of what he makes.
he isnt just some rich little kid who instantly got where he is, he worked for it. people fail to see that there are a lot of people like that and not everyone is a hedge fund owner.

he donates plenty of his money to good causes. he isnt a "greedy wall street CEO or hedge fund owner" . come on.

Last edited by SealXo (2008-10-21 21:45:25)

Turquoise
O Canada
+1,596|6710|North Carolina

SealXo wrote:

Turquoise wrote:

SealXo wrote:


Don't forget the people with no education that worked for decades to earn their money. Those guys are hiding out too.
Are you referring to illegals?
No, but I am referring to immigrants.. sort of.

My grandpa was poor as shit, his dad was a lithuanian immigrant, he did back breaking work in canada from the time he was 13-20 to save up to go to Columbia to get an education in DESIGN. Then he took his wife, and his kid, to CA, with 300 dollars in his pocket, legally. Then he gave up being a father to work for about ten years to sell church materials and drove across the country barely ever home. Hard life id say.. especially since hes a jew. Then, he used all that money he spent years away from home to create his own business (nothing to do with design) to make money. He worked at this 12 hours a day 7 days a week and saved, literally, every dime he ever made. A few decades later of constant working, he bought a few buildings which he now rents out on top of other things he invested in and he went from 300 dollars to uhm... quite a bit.

I don't see how its fairness to see how a man who gave up everything, even his family for awhile, and worked all his life going through the shit to give someone else a free lunch.

almost 60 years he worked his ass off to get where he is. he didnt do that to keep less then half of what he makes.
Well, for starters, he wouldn't keep less than half of what he makes unless Obama plans on raising the AMT.  The wealthy in this country pay a smaller share of their income in taxes than in just about any other First World country.

So, it's not like the wealthy have much to bitch about, even with Obama's plan.

We've grown so accustomed to supply side economics at this point that we've totally lost sight of our debt.  At some point, we're going to have to spend less, or else, taxes must rise.
imortal
Member
+240|6970|Austin, TX

Turquoise wrote:

After the bailout of Wall Street, I'd say it's time for payback.
I never agreed to the bailout.  I think the economy should be allowed to falter and get back up on its own.  If you teach the boards of these big companies that they will be bailed out if they mess up, then they will keep doing stupid things.  Make sure they know they are working without a net, and see how much more careful they are.

Yes, things would suck for us for a while.  I think we would come out of it a stronger nation, and a stronger people.
Turquoise
O Canada
+1,596|6710|North Carolina

imortal wrote:

Turquoise wrote:

After the bailout of Wall Street, I'd say it's time for payback.
I never agreed to the bailout.  I think the economy should be allowed to falter and get back up on its own.  If you teach the boards of these big companies that they will be bailed out if they mess up, then they will keep doing stupid things.  Make sure they know they are working without a net, and see how much more careful they are.

Yes, things would suck for us for a while.  I think we would come out of it a stronger nation, and a stronger people.
I totally agree, but now that we've done the bailout, it's time to take what is now ours.
SealXo
Member
+309|6841

Turquoise wrote:

SealXo wrote:

Turquoise wrote:


Are you referring to illegals?
No, but I am referring to immigrants.. sort of.

My grandpa was poor as shit, his dad was a lithuanian immigrant, he did back breaking work in canada from the time he was 13-20 to save up to go to Columbia to get an education in DESIGN. Then he took his wife, and his kid, to CA, with 300 dollars in his pocket, legally. Then he gave up being a father to work for about ten years to sell church materials and drove across the country barely ever home. Hard life id say.. especially since hes a jew. Then, he used all that money he spent years away from home to create his own business (nothing to do with design) to make money. He worked at this 12 hours a day 7 days a week and saved, literally, every dime he ever made. A few decades later of constant working, he bought a few buildings which he now rents out on top of other things he invested in and he went from 300 dollars to uhm... quite a bit.

I don't see how its fairness to see how a man who gave up everything, even his family for awhile, and worked all his life going through the shit to give someone else a free lunch.

almost 60 years he worked his ass off to get where he is. he didnt do that to keep less then half of what he makes.
Well, for starters, he wouldn't keep less than half of what he makes unless Obama plans on raising the AMT.  The wealthy in this country pay a smaller share of their income in taxes than in just about any other First World country.

So, it's not like the wealthy have much to bitch about, even with Obama's plan.

We've grown so accustomed to supply side economics at this point that we've totally lost sight of our debt.  At some point, we're going to have to spend less, or else, taxes must rise.
When you add up ALL the tax's, i think you would have a heart attack.
Turquoise
O Canada
+1,596|6710|North Carolina

SealXo wrote:

When you add up ALL the tax's, i think you would have a heart attack.
That might have more to do with California in general.  I know they are brutal about that stuff.  He should move to Texas.
PureFodder
Member
+225|6590

FEOS wrote:

PureFodder wrote:

FEOS wrote:

No, there's also massive amounts of college loans that must be paid off, as well.

I'm not saying doctors are barely getting by. They make gobs of money. Never implied otherwise.
But the same is true in other countries. US doctors are paid about twice that of European doctors. If this was due to the neccessity of paying off their college fees, their college fees would have to be approximately $2-3 million dollars in excess of the college fees in Europe to account for all of the extra money they get paid, assuming they work for 30 years at the national average wage for a doctor. US doctors earn large amounts of money and neither law suits or college fees even remotely account for the differences in typical US and European doctors pay.

The only sensible reason for the high salaries of US doctors is the lack of competition that is directly due to the number of residencies that congress funds each year.
Which types of doctors are you referring to? Salaries vary widely among specialties.
Total doctors salary divided by the number of doctors.

The US government controls the number of people training for most speciality practices as well.
PureFodder
Member
+225|6590

SealXo wrote:

When you add up ALL the tax's, i think you would have a heart attack.
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/48/27/41498733.pdf
Total tax revenue as a precentage of GDP.

USA - 28.3 %
Canada  -  33.3 %
UK   -  36.6 %
Germany   -   36.2 %
France  -   43.6 %
Sweeden  -  48.2 %


The USA is right down near the bottom in terms of taxes collected.
FEOS
Bellicose Yankee Air Pirate
+1,182|6716|'Murka

PureFodder wrote:

FEOS wrote:

PureFodder wrote:


But the same is true in other countries. US doctors are paid about twice that of European doctors. If this was due to the neccessity of paying off their college fees, their college fees would have to be approximately $2-3 million dollars in excess of the college fees in Europe to account for all of the extra money they get paid, assuming they work for 30 years at the national average wage for a doctor. US doctors earn large amounts of money and neither law suits or college fees even remotely account for the differences in typical US and European doctors pay.

The only sensible reason for the high salaries of US doctors is the lack of competition that is directly due to the number of residencies that congress funds each year.
Which types of doctors are you referring to? Salaries vary widely among specialties.
Total doctors salary divided by the number of doctors.

The US government controls the number of people training for most speciality practices as well.
No it doesn't. The market controls that...supply and demand.
“Everybody is a genius. But if you judge a fish by its ability to climb a tree, it will live its whole life believing that it is stupid.”
― Albert Einstein

Doing the popular thing is not always right. Doing the right thing is not always popular
FEOS
Bellicose Yankee Air Pirate
+1,182|6716|'Murka

PureFodder wrote:

SealXo wrote:

When you add up ALL the tax's, i think you would have a heart attack.
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/48/27/41498733.pdf
Total tax revenue as a precentage of GDP.

USA - 28.3 %
Canada  -  33.3 %
UK   -  36.6 %
Germany   -   36.2 %
France  -   43.6 %
Sweeden  -  48.2 %


The USA is right down near the bottom in terms of taxes collected.
Tax revenue and the amount of tax the average American worker pays as a percentage of their income are two different things. It is the latter to which Seal was referring.

If a country has a lot of exports, the percentage of GDP associated with tax receipts will be lower.

Bogus stat.
“Everybody is a genius. But if you judge a fish by its ability to climb a tree, it will live its whole life believing that it is stupid.”
― Albert Einstein

Doing the popular thing is not always right. Doing the right thing is not always popular
PureFodder
Member
+225|6590

FEOS wrote:

PureFodder wrote:

FEOS wrote:


Which types of doctors are you referring to? Salaries vary widely among specialties.
Total doctors salary divided by the number of doctors.

The US government controls the number of people training for most speciality practices as well.
No it doesn't. The market controls that...supply and demand.
The government is in complete control of the supply of new doctors, hence controls the market. The US government literally decides upon the number of new doctors to train each year. If they train more doctors, the wages of doctors will go down via market competition.
FEOS
Bellicose Yankee Air Pirate
+1,182|6716|'Murka

PureFodder wrote:

FEOS wrote:

PureFodder wrote:


Total doctors salary divided by the number of doctors.

The US government controls the number of people training for most speciality practices as well.
No it doesn't. The market controls that...supply and demand.
The government is in complete control of the supply of new doctors, hence controls the market. The US government literally decides upon the number of new doctors to train each year. If they train more doctors, the wages of doctors will go down via market competition.
No, it doesn't. Where on earth do you come up with that? The throughput of medical schools literally decides the number of new doctors trained each year, and the government doesn't control those schools.
“Everybody is a genius. But if you judge a fish by its ability to climb a tree, it will live its whole life believing that it is stupid.”
― Albert Einstein

Doing the popular thing is not always right. Doing the right thing is not always popular
PureFodder
Member
+225|6590

FEOS wrote:

PureFodder wrote:

FEOS wrote:

No it doesn't. The market controls that...supply and demand.
The government is in complete control of the supply of new doctors, hence controls the market. The US government literally decides upon the number of new doctors to train each year. If they train more doctors, the wages of doctors will go down via market competition.
No, it doesn't. Where on earth do you come up with that? The throughput of medical schools literally decides the number of new doctors trained each year, and the government doesn't control those schools.
Ok, now you're just being obtuse. As I already explained, from USA today;
The marketplace doesn't determine how many doctors the nation has, as it does for engineers, pilots and other professions. The number of doctors is a political decision, heavily influenced by doctors themselves.

Congress controls the supply of physicians by how much federal funding it provides for medical residencies — the graduate training required of all doctors....Even doctors trained in other countries must serve medical residencies in the USA to practice here.
The US government completely controls the supply of new doctors.
FEOS
Bellicose Yankee Air Pirate
+1,182|6716|'Murka

PureFodder wrote:

FEOS wrote:

PureFodder wrote:


The government is in complete control of the supply of new doctors, hence controls the market. The US government literally decides upon the number of new doctors to train each year. If they train more doctors, the wages of doctors will go down via market competition.
No, it doesn't. Where on earth do you come up with that? The throughput of medical schools literally decides the number of new doctors trained each year, and the government doesn't control those schools.
Ok, now you're just being obtuse. As I already explained, from USA today;
The marketplace doesn't determine how many doctors the nation has, as it does for engineers, pilots and other professions. The number of doctors is a political decision, heavily influenced by doctors themselves.

Congress controls the supply of physicians by how much federal funding it provides for medical residencies — the graduate training required of all doctors....Even doctors trained in other countries must serve medical residencies in the USA to practice here.
The US government completely controls the supply of new doctors.
I'm not being obtuse...the source is wrong. The government funds some residencies, but the bulk are privately funded. It's more schooling, and the students either pay for it themselves or get scholarships/fellowships (again, a mix of private/public funding, but mostly private).
“Everybody is a genius. But if you judge a fish by its ability to climb a tree, it will live its whole life believing that it is stupid.”
― Albert Einstein

Doing the popular thing is not always right. Doing the right thing is not always popular
PureFodder
Member
+225|6590

FEOS wrote:

PureFodder wrote:

FEOS wrote:

No, it doesn't. Where on earth do you come up with that? The throughput of medical schools literally decides the number of new doctors trained each year, and the government doesn't control those schools.
Ok, now you're just being obtuse. As I already explained, from USA today;
The marketplace doesn't determine how many doctors the nation has, as it does for engineers, pilots and other professions. The number of doctors is a political decision, heavily influenced by doctors themselves.

Congress controls the supply of physicians by how much federal funding it provides for medical residencies — the graduate training required of all doctors....Even doctors trained in other countries must serve medical residencies in the USA to practice here.
The US government completely controls the supply of new doctors.
I'm not being obtuse...the source is wrong. The government funds some residencies, but the bulk are privately funded. It's more schooling, and the students either pay for it themselves or get scholarships/fellowships (again, a mix of private/public funding, but mostly private).
http://money.cnn.com/magazines/fortune/ … /index.htm
Unveiled in 1992, they are the work of two prestigious committees that advise Congress and the Department of Health and Human Services on physician supply and Medicare: the Council on Graduate Medical Education and the Physician Payment Review Commission. The committees would put a tourniquet on residency positions, the main artery for new physicians. This year 24,000 doctors will enter residency programs in hospitals and clinics. Under the manpower plans, the first-year residency rolls would drop by 5,000. Medicare, which now pays $5 billion a year to support residency programs, would decline to fund any new slots. More primary-care doctors would be trained, but specialists would get the scalpel. A new federal commission would set strict yearly quotas for every category of doctor, from neurosurgeon to pediatrician. Under the COGME proposal, the number of primary-care residents would increase by more than 20%. The number of graduating orthopedists, dermatologists, radiologists, and other specialists would shrink by at least 40%.
http://www.nejmjobs.org/rpt/physician-immigration.aspx
http://www.visalaw.com/news/siskindindus_15mar04
http://www.larouchepub.com/other/interv … ooper.html
The message can be stated very succinctly: Build infrastructure—and in this case, infrastructure is residency programs, which means removing the caps that restrict the number at medical schools. It is not complicated.
imortal
Member
+240|6970|Austin, TX

FEOS wrote:

PureFodder wrote:

FEOS wrote:


Which types of doctors are you referring to? Salaries vary widely among specialties.
Total doctors salary divided by the number of doctors.

The US government controls the number of people training for most speciality practices as well.
No it doesn't. The market controls that...supply and demand.
Well, supply and demand, spaces available in schools... and let us not forget "in training" does not mean they make it.  Oh, and in nearly every part of the health care industry, certifications for medical workers are controlled by the state, and not by the federal government.  There are some national standards out there (i.e National Registry for EMTs/paramedics), but states are not required to use it.
unnamednewbie13
Moderator
+2,060|7077|PNW

oChaos.Haze wrote:

I hope you at least take their money everytime you play, because they obviously aren't the brightest of the bunch, hence why they are in private practice in the first place.
Are you saying that people who run private practices are stupid?

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