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Re: cost of peer review and electronic distribution of scholarly journals



         ** Apologies for Cross-Posting **

On Thu, 22 May 2008, N. Miradon wrote:

The current issue of Nature has correspondence from Dr Raghavendra Gadagkar. The abstract of his letter (available at [1]) compares and contrasts 'publish for free and pay to read' with 'pay to publish and read for free'. To read the letter in full will cost you USD 18.

N Miradon

[1] http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v453/n7194/full/453450c.html
Nature 453, 450 (22 May 2008) | doi:10.1038/453450c; Published online 21 May
2008
Here is the part you can read for free:

Open-access more harm than good in developing world
Raghavendra Gadagkar
Centre for Ecological Sciences,
Indian Institute of Science,
Bangalore 560012, India

"The traditional 'publish for free and pay to read' business model adopted by publishers of academic journals can lead to disparity in access to scholarly literature, exacerbated by rising journal costs and shrinking library budgets. However, although the 'pay to publish and read for free' business model of open-access publishing has helped to create a level playing field for readers, it does more harm than good in the developing world..."

It is easy to guess what else the letter says: That at the prices currently charged by those Gold OA publishers that charge for Gold OA publishing today, it is unaffordable to most researchers as well as to their institutions and funders in India and elsewhere in the Developing World.

This is a valid concern, even in view of the usual reply (which is that many Gold OA journals do not charge a fee, and exceptions are made by those that do charge a fee, for those who cannot afford to pay it). The concern is that current Gold OA fees would not scale equitably if they became universal.

However, the overall concern is misplaced. The implication is that whereas the user-access-denial arising from the the unaffordability of subscription fees (user-institution pays) is bad, the author-publication-denial arising from the unaffordability of Gold OA publishing fees (author-institution pays) would be worse.

But this leaves out Green OA self-archiving, and the Green OA self-archiving mandates that are now growing worldwide.

Not only does Green OA cost next to nothing to provide, but once it becomes universal, if it ever does go on to generate universal subscription cancellations too -- making the subscription model of publishing cost recovery unsustainable -- universal Green OA will also by the very same token generate the release of the annual user-institution cancellation fees to pay the costs of publishing on the Gold OA (author-institution pays) cost-recovery model. http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm200304/cmselect/cmsctech/399/399w e152.htm

The natural question to ask next is whether user-institution costs and author-institution costs will balance out, or will those institutions that used more research than they provided benefit and those institutions that provided more research than they used lose out?

This would be a reasonable question to ask (and has been asked before) http://www.google.com/search?num=100&hl=en&q=+site%3Alistserver.sigmaxi.org+ amsci+%22net+provider%22&btnG=Search -- except that it is a fundamental mistake to assume that the *costs* of publishing would remain the same under the conditions of universal Green OA.

It is far more realistic to expect that if and when journals (both their print editions and their online PDF editions) are no longer in demand -- because users are all instead using the authors' OA postprints, self-archived in their IRs -- that journals will convert to Gold OA not under the current terms of Gold OA (where journals still provide most of the products and services of conventional journal publishing, apart from the print edition), but under substantially scaled-down terms.

Harnad, S. (2007) The Green Road to Open Access: A Leveraged
Transition. In: The Culture of Periodicals from the Perspective of
the Electronic Age. L'Harmattan, pp. 99-105.
http://eprints.ecs.soton.ac.uk/15753/

In particular, all the current costs of providing both the print edition and the PDF edition, as well as all current costs of access-provision and archiving will vanish (for the publisher), because they have been off-loaded onto the the distributed network of Green OA IRs, each hosting their own peer-reviewed, published postprints. The only service the peer-reviewed journal publisher will need to provide is peer review itself.

That is why Richard Poynder's recent query (about the true cost of peer review alone) is a relevant one.

As I have said many times before, based on my own experience of editing a peer-reviewed journal for a quarter century, as well as the estimates that can be made from the costs of Gold OA journals *that provide only peer review and nothing else today*, the costs per paper of peer review alone will be so much lower than the costs per paper of conventional journal publishing today, or even the costs per paper of most Gold OA publishing today, that the problem of the possibility of imbalance between net user-institution costs and net author-institution costs will vanish, just as the the subscription model vanished.

Alma Swan has forwarded the link to a JISC-funded study of such questions being conducted by John Houghton (Australia) and Charles Oppenheim (UK) (in the context of UK research, where there are, I assure you, author-institutions that are every bit as worried about current Gold OA publishing fees as Developing World institutions are) and RIN has released a study:

http://www.jisc.ac.uk/whatwedo/programmes/programme_rep_pres/economicsscholarlypublishing.aspx

Alma also forwarded this study, by RIN:

http://www.rin.ac.uk/costs-funding-flows

Peter Suber has pointed to Fytton Rowland's 2002 estimates of the cost of peer review alone:

Rowland, F. The Peer Review Process. Learned Publishing, 15(4) 247-58.
http://www.jisc.ac.uk/uploaded_documents/rowland.pdf

Peter writes:

"Rowland does a literature survey to determine the costs of peer
review (see Section 5). He concludes (Section 7) that it's about
$200 per submitted paper, or $400 per published paper at a journal
with a rejection rate of 50%.

"I'm not in a position to vouch for the results, but it's the only
paper I've seen trying to answer this narrow question.

"Note that the paper came out in 2002 and doesn't reflect the latest
generation of journal management software. This matters because
steadily improving software (including open-source software) is
steadily taking over the clerical chores of facilitating peer review,
and thereby reducing its costs."

I would add that even at $400 per paper, that would make peer review alone cost only 10% of the average price of $4000 that Andrew Odlyzko estimated was being paid per article in 1997 (i.e., the total collective contribution summed across subscribing institutions) and less than a third of most Gold OA publishing fees per article today.

Odlyzko, A. (1997) The economics of Electronic Journals.
First Monday 2(8)
http://www.firstmonday.org/Issues/issue2_8/odlyzko/index.html

Stevan Harnad