Medical doctors are paid well in many places other than the US, though not as well as in the US. (For that matter, most other well-paid jobs are better paid in the US than anywhere else. Software development, law, senior management, etc.)
Also, though of course this was no part of the original question, medicine offers more confidence than most careers that your work is actually making the world a better place. (Which may not actually be the right question to ask, of course—what matters is arguably the marginal effect, and if you’re well paid and care enough about people in poor countries you may well be able to do more good by charitable donations than you ever could directly by your work. But it’s a thing many people care about.)
Medical doctors are paid well in many places other than the US, though not as well as in the US. (For that matter, most other well-paid jobs are better paid in the US than anywhere else. Software development, law, senior management, etc.)
Also, though of course this was no part of the original question, medicine offers more confidence than most careers that your work is actually making the world a better place. (Which may not actually be the right question to ask, of course—what matters is arguably the marginal effect, and if you’re well paid and care enough about people in poor countries you may well be able to do more good by charitable donations than you ever could directly by your work. But it’s a thing many people care about.)
More importantly, it seems that being a medical doctor can pay very large dividends both in donable dollars and in warm-fuzzies.