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Re: Institutional Journal Costs in an Open Access Environment



Heather Morrison wrote:

First, a quote from Walters: "the PLoS Open Access Model would bring dramatic cost reductions for all nine institutions in the sample"... [and] it seems that we are assuming that it would not be fair or universities with intensive research production to pay a higher share of the costs of scholarly communication. Why shouldn't they pay more, though?
One must remember that the $1,500/article used in Bill Walter's article did not include PLoS memberships paid for by many organizations. For Cornell University, the library pays $10,000/yr to be such a member. PLoS is also a non-profit organization. One would expect (producer-pays model aside) that a publishing system run entirely through non-profit societies and associations would be cheaper. In fact, they are much, much cheaper for research organizations like Cornell than a producer-pays model. In our OA White Paper, we calculated that author payments for journals produced by non-profit publishers would need to be lower than $400/article for our library to start saving money.

You must realize that neither Bill Walters nor I have ever used words like "fair" or "should' or "ought" in our reports. This moralistic language has been entirely adopted by the OA advocates. Should research institutions (and their libraries) pay more than they currently do? This a decision that needs to be taken up by provosts and policy makers. If library budgets are indications of the institution's willingness to adopt an author-pays model, one could conclude that their position is "no".

--Phil Davis

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Institutional Journal Costs in an Open Access Environment
by William H. Walters
http://www.library.millersville.edu/public_html/walters/journal_costs.pdf