Social Science and Medicine
Volume 200, 2018, Pages 227-237

Is there a ‘pig cycle’ in the labour supply of doctors? How training and immigration policies respond to physician shortages (Article)

Chojnicki X.* , Moullan Y.
  • a LEM-CNRS, University of Lille and Chaire Transitions Démographiques, Transitions Economiques, France
  • b Center of Economics and Management of Indian Ocean (CEMOI) from University of Reunion Island, France, International Migration Institute (IMI) from University of Oxford, United Kingdom, Institute for Research and Information in Health Economics (IRDES), France

Abstract

Many OECD countries are faced with the considerable challenge of a physician shortage. This paper investigates the strategies that OECD governments adopt and determines whether these policies effectively address these medical shortages. Due to the amount of time medical training requires, it takes longer for an expansion in medical school capacity to have an effect than the recruitment of foreign-trained physicians. Using data obtained from the OECD (2014) and Bhargava et al. (2011), we constructed a unique country-level panel dataset that includes annual data for 17 OECD countries on physician shortages, the number of medical school graduates and immigration and emigration rates from 1991 to 2004. By calculating panel fixed-effect estimates, we find that after a period of medical shortages, OECD governments produce more medical graduates in the long run but in the short term, they primarily recruit from abroad; however, at the same time, certain practising physicians choose to emigrate. Simulation results show the limits of recruiting only abroad in the long term but also highlight its appropriateness for the short term when there is a recurrent cycle of shortages/surpluses in the labour supply of physicians (pig cycle theory). © 2018 Elsevier Ltd

Author Keywords

Foreign-trained physicians International migration of doctors Physician shortages Medical graduates

Index Keywords

training pig developing country human immigration statistics and numerical data Developed Countries Physicians nonhuman Humans labor migration immigration policy Foreign Medical Graduates emigration supply and distribution OECD Article organization and management data set labor supply migration physician simulation international migration government health worker Emigration and Immigration foreign medical graduate public policy Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development Suidae Schools, Medical medical school

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85041485930&doi=10.1016%2fj.socscimed.2018.01.038&partnerID=40&md5=6194148011e983b31d23ef983ad4d93e

DOI: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2018.01.038
ISSN: 02779536
Cited by: 2
Original Language: English