Misinformation and naïveté.
Have you looked up the actual data or are you just spewing at the mouth for some other reason? Are you planning on going to the Carib or have a friend in med school down there? Fact is, those schools are generally less reputable than US-based schools. That's not to say you can't be successful but why take the chance? You haven't actually said anything of value. You're basically attacking others' arguments by whining that they're wrong. If you disagree, argue it with some facts.
Last I recall seeing, 48% of Caribbean grads who apply for a US residency will gain one. Further, at Ross of the 200 who began as M1s one year, only 80 made it to clinical rotations, which is an attrition rate of
60%!
So you do the math -- 48% of the 40% who get to clinicals will actually end up w/ a US residency and become eligible to practice in the US.
That means only 19% will be eligible to practice in the US!
And the fact of the matter is that that's a generous estimate because
not everyone who makes it to 3rd year clinicals will end up graduating. As a result, it's probably a bit less than 19%.
So now do the math. Let's say this student plans to go into a lucrative specialty. For instance, how about we compare a derm PA w/ a derm MD:
MD: base $308,000 (w/ >3 yrs' practice)
PA: base $110,474
So the MD makes almost 3x as much. That's pretty good...until you consider debt:
average debt...
MD: (conservative estimate -- non-Caribbean): $150,000
PA: $56,909
Once again, MD is almost 3x the amount, which is fine...
...Until you factor in your chances of success:
PA:
If you get in...
debt: $56,909 (min $95,607 after interest)
If you don't get in...
debt: $0
If you don't get your specialty
debt: $56,909
salary: >$80,000
MD (Caribbean):
If you get in...
debt: $150,000+ ($252,000 min w/ interest)
If you don't get a (U.S.) residency (81+% chance)
debt: $56,909
salary:
$0 (at least unless you're willing to work somewhere outside the US that accepts Carib students more easily)
If we do it mathematically, here are our averages if we took an infinite number of trials per the above, assuming a 35-year career (age 30-65):
MD=-$252,200+19%*$308,000*35 years=
$1,796,200 total life earnings
PA=-$95,607+100%*$110,474*35 years=
$3,770,983 total life earnings
So... 1.8 million or 3.8 million... which would you prefer?