Social Sciences, asked by parneetkaurgoraya05, 20 days ago

why doctors are classified in tertiary occupation​

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
0

Why do doctors come under the tertiary sector?

Economy has been broadly divided into three sectors; primary sector (dealing with raw materials), secondary sector (dealing with manufacturing) and tertiary sector (dealing with services). In service sector, the focus is on people interacting with people and serving the customer rather than transforming physical goods.

Doctors neither do any manufacturing (secondary sector) nor deal with raw materials (primary sector). They provide consultation/treatment and take a suitable fee for the service. The peculiarities of service industry are equally applicable to medical profession. Services are intangible, making it difficult for potential customers (patient) to understand what they will receive and what value it will hold for them. There is no guarantees that patient will survive even after the best of the treatment or cure would be assured, irrespective of the value for price paid. The quality of the services depends largely on the quality of the doctors. Like other service sector, product differentiation is also difficult. For example, how does one choose one doctor over another, if both provide similar services.

Thus, doctors mostly will form a part of tertiary sector or service sector. If a doctor does some innovation and build a factory to produce the equipment/machine, he will form a part of secondary sector.

Answered by sachiw270
0

Answer:

Why do doctors come under the tertiary sector?

Economy has been broadly divided into three sectors; primary sector (dealing with raw materials), secondary sector (dealing with manufacturing) and tertiary sector (dealing with services). In service sector, the focus is on people interacting with people and serving the customer rather than transforming physical goods.

Doctors neither do any manufacturing (secondary sector) nor deal with raw materials (primary sector). They provide consultation/treatment and take a suitable fee for the service. The peculiarities of service industry are equally applicable to medical profession. Services are intangible, making it difficult for potential customers (patient) to understand what they will receive and what value it will hold for them. There is no guarantees that patient will survive even after the best of the treatment or cure would be assured, irrespective of the value for price paid. The quality of the services depends largely on the quality of the doctors. Like other service sector, product differentiation is also difficult. For example, how does one choose one doctor over another, if both provide similar services.

Thus, doctors mostly will form a part of tertiary sector or service sector. If a doctor does some innovation and build a factory to produce the equipment/machine, he will form a part of secondary sector.

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