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RE: Bergstrom & McAfee Open Letter to University Presidents and Provosts
- To: <liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu>
- Subject: RE: Bergstrom & McAfee Open Letter to University Presidents and Provosts
- From: "John McDonald" <jmcdonald@library.caltech.edu>
- Date: Mon, 7 Nov 2005 18:51:04 EST
- Reply-to: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Sender: owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
Ann, Good point. I asked Dr. McAfee to include the descriptive statistics (mean, median, standard deviation) for each subject category to the website so institutions can do just what you suggest. Furthermore, I think everyone should calculate their cost per citation by using local citations, those made to each journal by your published authors, rather than raw ISI citation counts. Calculating these value numbers are not only do-able, but should be done by anyone evaluating their collection. John McDonald Acquisitions Librarian California Institute of Technology -----Original Message----- From: owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu [mailto:owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu] On Behalf Of Ann Okerson Sent: Thursday, November 03, 2005 3:29 PM To: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu Subject: Re: Bergstrom & McAfee Open Letter to University Presidents and Provosts The authors' calculations (or at least the methodologies) are certainly accurate for print journal subscriptions. The findings are also consistent with studies done in the past at ARL and also by other researchers. However, the calculations would need to be done quite differently for library and consortial package collections, wherein for a small extra surcharge one gets many more titles. A not atypical situation would be that the Library subscribed to, say, 100 print journals from a publisher -- and with the e-collection might pay an extra 5-10% for the entire list which could have double or triple the number of titles. At times the surcharge might be negotiated and aggregated consortially with a payment made by the consortium. So, in those cases, numbers would have to be re-worked entirely; the "cost per" would be lower by quite a lot; and there could also be sizeable variations between libraries' costs. Re-working is a complex process, were it do-able. Ann Okerson/Yale Library On Tue, 1 Nov 2005, Ann Okerson wrote: > See: www.hss.caltech.edu/~mcafee/Journal/OpenLetter.pdf > > An Open Letter to All University Presidents and Provosts Concerning > Increasingly Expensive Journals > > by Theodore Bergstrom and R. Preston McAfee > > For nearly a century, a symbiotic relationship existed between scholars > and scholarly publishers. Academics freely provided their discoveries, > work, and time editing and reviewing, and scholarly publishers provided > packaging and sold the output of the academics' labors for a modest > profit. This benefited both groups, because the publishers received the > most valuable inputs for free, while the academics were sheltered from > the business end of publishing and received the packaged output at > reasonable profits. As the primary concern of academics is the wide > dissemination of their ideas, the arrangement was suitable for both > parties. > > In the 1970s, some for-profit scholarly publishers discovered that > library demands for journals were remarkably unresponsive to price > increases and that the publishers could greatly increase their revenues > by sharply increasing their prices. This is evidenced by the dramatic > disparity that has emerged between the prices charged by for-profit > publishers such as Elsevier, Wiley, and Kluwer, those charged by > non-profit societies and university presses. This gap widened in the > 1980s and further widened in the 1990s, so that the for-profit journals > charge about five times as much per page and fifteen times as much per > citation as the non-profits, as evidenced by > > Journal Prices by Discipline and Publisher Type* > > Cost per Page Cost per Citation > For-Profit Non-profit For-Profit Non-Profit > > Ecology $1.01 $0.19 $0.73 $0.05 > Economics $0.83 $0.17 $2.33 $0.15 > Atmosph. Sci $0.95 $0.15 $0.88 $0.07 > Mathematics $0.70 $0.27 $1.32 $0.28 > Neurosciences $0.89 $0.10 $0.23 $0.04 > Physics $0.63 $0.19 $0.38 $0.05 > > * From "The Costs and Benefits of Site Licences to Academic Journals", > Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Jan. 04, by C.T. > Bergstrom and T.C. Bergstrom. [SNIP]
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