Shocking Secrets Revealed! What Big Libraries Pay for Big Deals | Library Babel Fish @insidehighered

abernard102@gmail.com 2014-06-25

Summary:

"Finally we’re seeing the fruits of FOIAs in a new article recently published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. (Though it’s not open access yet, there’s coverage in The Guardian and supplementary tables are freely accessible.) The study demonstrates two things: first, non-profit publishers don’t gouge libraries nearly as much as for-profit publishers do (though bear in mind that a great many non-profit scholarly organizations outsource their publishing to for-profit giants and are therefore part of the problem). And second, the differences in pricing among schools are huge and difficult to justify. Are some librarians just better at negotiating? Are some reps soft touches? What factors are used in making these calculations?  In any case, it’s high time these secret contracts were disinfected with a little sunshine. I’m grateful to the economists who spent years fighting to bring them to light. I’m also grateful to Timothy Gowers who did some sleuthing and analysis of his own last spring. While I’m at it, hurrah for FOIA laws! While all this has been going on, academic libraries were signing new rounds of big deals – this time for ebooks. Last month, many libraries were hit with enormous price hikes in these big packages. Evidently, the revenue stream that publishers anticipated weren’t materializing through the way these deals were structured and the ways library users were responding. (Incidentally, though ebook prices for public libraries have been in the news, it’s a different market; what academic libraries are seeing looks more like databases for journal articles, only with more end-user hassle and a different kind of revenue structure for publishers, so far as I can tell.) Libraries that opted for ebooks over print weren’t generating enough business to keep publishers satisfied. Once again, non-profit publishers – university presses in this case – appear to be offering fairer deals to libraries on the whole. The only question in my mind is why libraries are so eager to repeat the mistakes of the past, this time with ebooks ... Here’s the deal: libraries must not only embrace the open access movement, but must support a non-profit model for scholarly publishing. From what we’ve seen so far, the same publishers who demand that their subscription prices be secret are gearing up to own open access by making author-side fees a new revenue stream. There are no doubt cases where author fees make sense, particularly in sciences which have long supported publication fees through grant funding, but letting the corporations who got us in this mess keep their profits while extracting wealth from a different part of the process is not the solution."

Link:

http://www.insidehighered.com/blogs/library-babel-fish/shocking-secrets-revealed-what-big-libraries-pay-big-deals#sthash.vO8i9mHZ.dpbs

From feeds:

Open Access Tracking Project (OATP) » abernard102@gmail.com

Tags:

oa.new oa.comment oa.libraries oa.librarians oa.prices oa.publishers oa.business_models oa.books oa.economics_of oa.advocacy oa.budgets oa.universities oa.colleges oa.hei oa.foi

Date tagged:

06/25/2014, 09:19

Date published:

06/25/2014, 05:19