Welcome back to Pakistan: A practical guide for Physicians returning home
Dr. Mohammad Saeed.
Consultant Rheumatology and Immunogenetics. ImmunoCure
Written: 11 August 2018
Since this article was written, Pakistan, like the rest of the world, has undergone several critical phases including COVID-19 pandemic and economic challenges. However, this article could still serve as a guide to physicians wanting to return home.
The need for this article was felt when many Pakistani doctors abroad and visiting Pakistan had shown deep interest in my experience of moving back to Pakistan. I realize a lot of doctors want to move to their homeland, Pakistan, but having lived abroad for several years, with growing family needs they experience uncertainty and genuine anxiety. Moving back to Pakistan can be the most enriching and rewarding experience of your life. The people and the country need your expertise and you need to feel at home once again, putting your heart and soul into what you love most. This article hopes to provide a general outline for your planned move to Pakistan for reasons of personal growth and development – serving your immediate and extended family, providing your children a culturally relevant environment with strong potential for their educational development and creating meaningful social impact based on your skills.
Your move back to Pakistan should be thought of as a move into your future and not into your past. Your priority of moving close to your parents and extended family is a move into your past. However, your children are growing into the future. Their needs will be different and you will not be satisfied unless you ensure a bright future for your children in Pakistan. Therefore as a first priority you must provide your nuclear family with the same space as you have done for them abroad. As a Physician, you would have lived abroad for a number of years in a nuclear family model. Your family will continue to need their own space and your time. This is only possible if you provide them with a home of their own. Therefore your first priority should be to build a home for your family. The work on this project should start early with savings being directed to it on priority basis, long before your planned move.
The practical steps for home building in Pakistan vary according to your circumstances. However buying a home is usually out of financial reach by a substantial amount. Moreover, land in Pakistan is generally expensive especially in major cities and more so in localities where you may want a lifestyle close to your experience abroad. Also buying property is no trivial task and it will be compounded by the fact that you will still be abroad trying to save up for this major project and not aware of all ground realities in the city of your choice. The best method in this situation would be to work with a reputable bank in Pakistan which deals in home ownership and can accommodate residents abroad in its banking policies such as home loans. This will be a safe and efficient way of buying property in Pakistan even if you can afford to buy directly. Your savings should be enough to make the down payment of your home loan (minimum of 1/3 of the property price). On the other hand you may want to buy land and then build your home yourself with help of family and friends supervising the project, but this is a tedious task. I recommend buying a built house.
The location of your house is critical. I recommend choosing a locality (in the city of your choice) where there are good schools for your children at short driving distances. This will reduce their daily travel time and consequent fatigue, making their move to Pakistan more enjoyable. Your children will be spending a good portion of their day at school. So choose the best environment for them. The move will be stressful for them so the school environment must be supportive of their emotional and development needs. Academics cannot be compromised but a supportive school environment does take priority.
Your savings should be based on the average price of a house in the locality of your choice. Your foreign currency earnings will be a major advantage. You could open a foreign currency account in a reputable Pakistani bank of your choice along with a Rupee current account. This will allow you to transfer your savings in foreign currency to Pakistan, build your credit history for an eventual sizeable home loan from the bank and your Rupee current account will be ready for your home transaction.
All your documents as well as for your spouse and children must be in order. These include National ID cards (also obtain Family certificate from 24-hour NADRA offices), Passports (Pakistani), National Tax ID (FBR), Driver’s license(s), PMDC license (based on your MBBS degree; PG training may be added later). It will be a good idea to hire a Tax lawyer (through your contacts in Pakistan) in advance for all your financial needs. Once this work is done and you have enough money in your foreign currency account for the down-payment, you are ready to hit the long hard road of finding the house you will call home in Pakistan. For this you will need to personally see many houses through multiple estate agents but in reality what you need is one trustworthy agent. Again use your personal contacts but you would have already realized by now that for all you have already done, you would have visited Pakistan several times. Yes, repeated visits are highly recommended for you and your family to acclimatize and get the work done. I did not visit Pakistan for nearly a decade prior to my move and still got everything done but I would not recommend taking this route. Try and visit Pakistan and at each visit get some of the tasks completed. It will ease your move back.
Once you locate the house you want to buy and the deal is made, your bank will review your application for the loan and approve it based on its risk assessment of you. The bank will send its own team to review the property and evaluate its value, ensure proper documentation and provide you its own comprehensive opinion. This is valuable consultancy even if you intend to and have the ability to buy the property in full on your own. The re-payment method that will work best in your favor is what is known as ‘balloon payments’ i.e. payment over and above your monthly installment. The bank loan will be for ~ 20 years. Borrow the least amount of money possible as paying back (with interest / rental options) is always more difficult. Your scheduled payments repay only a very small percentage of your principle loan. Majority (>80%) goes to the ‘rental / interest’ payments initially. So the smaller the loan and the more frequent the balloon payments, the sooner you will own your property and at the least overall cost. You will have to have a cushion for renovation work (especially if you are buying a built house). Of course smaller renovations can be done after having moved into your new home.
Getting the house out of the way is half the move. The other major component is landing a job for yourself. Try and avoid doing exactly that, i.e. get a job; don’t. My advice is that one should do a job in the West and business in the East. It’s more rewarding that way. Remember you are moving from a resourceful region to a resource-limited country. You have to have the creativity to generate your own resources. This is no small task either, perhaps more demanding than the first one and requiring lot more persistence and patience. God be with you! If you do decide on landing a job, negotiate from abroad. Once you are in Pakistan you lose your negotiation power and the salary packages start thinning rapidly. Do not panic. Believe in your own ability and know that what the nation expects you to do is just what you are trained to do and have years of experience in.
The medical profession is very rewarding. If you are a physician you have very basic needs to establish a practice of your own. However the most demanding need is time, which you don’t have in abundance. If you have a property loan to pay off you have to be able to generate substantial amount to pay off the monthly installments as well as pay for your daily needs. Your family and friends may come to your rescue here. If you take a non-interest loan from them to pay off the bank you save majorly on the interest / rental financial leakage, own your property and reduce the earning pressure. On the other hand landing a well paying job for ~ 2y years initially is not a bad idea either. This will help you build your social and professional contacts, maintain a good working relationship with your bank and give you time to settle your family. The usual problem with salaries is that they are not according to your expectations. The reason is that Pakistan healthcare is a resource limited industry with few positions at Consultant level and extreme competition as a result. For an institution to hire a foreign trained Consultant it could easily hire at least two locally trained Consultants if not more. It does not always make good business sense to hire foreign trained Consultants.
Your main dilemma is that just like when you moved to the West you did not have a financial credit history, when you move to the East you do not have a social credit history. Patients do not know you. So you do not have the market. You need a referral base. On salaried positions your hospital provides that referral base. But it is not ideal. You will generally be overworked and your quality of care may be compromised, severely reducing your job satisfaction. Remember after moving to Pakistan you will not be getting any younger. Your energies will deplete rapidly given the volume of responsibilities you will be shouldering.
You could enter a partnership based model such as what we also offer at ImmunoCure. If you are a foreign trained physician Consultant, partnerships offer you our referral base with flexible timings that suit your needs. You grow at your own pace and your patient base grows around you. Within 1-year, provided you dedicate yourself to your practice, your patients will recognize your outstanding care in enough numbers to generate word of mouth referrals. For such group practices trust is key. As long as partners can maintain long term trust and are willing to share their practice base, this model can work and will be the ideal model for returning doctors. The sharing of clinical practice is based on overlap of fields. Either single specialty or clinically overlapping multispecialty groups can be formed. Such group practices will be economically viable and will have tremendous growth potential. The incoming doctor should also ensure a fair share to the residing Consultant. The partnerships should be win-win situations or in technical terms ‘Non-zero sum’. Dynamic share determination is the most equitable and works best for both parties.
“In the great non-zero sum games of history, if you are part of the problem, you will likely be a victim of the solution.” – Non-Zero. Robert Wright.
One intermediate possibility is that while you are planning to return to Pakistan and making your visits to get the administrative work wrapped up, you may start your partnership on temporary basis. You could then consult on local patients on your visits to Pakistan, experience the clinical environment, evaluate the financial possibilities and gradually build your practice in Pakistan even before landing here permanently.
ImmunoCure extends a warm welcome to you and your family.
Welcome home.
Dr. Mohammad Saeed
M.D, DABIM, Rheumatology (USA)
Consultant Rheumatologist
Musculoskeletal Ultrasound Specialist
ImmunoCure
Suite 102, 1st Floor, Building 24-C, Lane 1,
Ittehad Commercial Area, DHA Phase 6, Karachi, Pakistan
Website: Immunocure.pk
Appointments: 0308-2822712