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Re: Institutional Journal Costs in an Open Access Environment
- To: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Subject: Re: Institutional Journal Costs in an Open Access Environment
- From: Ray English <Ray.English@oberlin.edu>
- Date: Thu, 27 Apr 2006 18:03:09 EDT
- Reply-to: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Sender: owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
I think it's important to read the full study by Bill Walters and look at his data closely before deciding what conclusions to draw. I was on a panel with Bill back in March and I saw his summary findings at that time. I also read through his full study carefully night before last before formulating these comments. The study looks at journal costs in four scientific fields for a representative group of academic and research libraries of different sizes. Specifically it examines three models: 1) what those libraries are currently paying for journals in those fields, 2) what those institutions (not necessarily just their libraries) would pay under a PLOS model, and 3) what those institutions would pay under what he calls an equal-revenue open access model. The PLOS model assumes that all journals in those fields would be open access, that they would charge author fees of $1,500 per article, and that the libraries would maintain print copies of all journals at the PLOS annual charge of $160 per title. Under this model all of the institutions studied would pay substantially less than they did under the conventional model. The cost for the largest research institutions (University of Michigan) would be just 51% of what they would pay under the conventional model. Savings for smaller institutions would be substantially more (up to 97% in the case of one comprehensive university). All institutions would gain in terms of research access, with dramatic gains for the smaller institutions and more modest gains for the large research library.) Bill developed the equal-revenue open access model primarily because he felt that publishers would not accept that much of a loss in revenue. The equal revenue model maintains total spending at the level of the conventional model (what libraries are currently paying), but distributes that spending according to the number of first-author articles published at the institutions studied. His model does indeed show that for the largest research university (again the University of Michigan) the total cost to the institution would be substantially more under this model than under the conventional model ($1.14 million versus $627 thousand). All other institutions would have substantial savings. The thing that Bill doesn't focus on, however, is the cost per article under his equal-revenue model. If you assume that the cost of providing the print copy remains the same as under the PLOS model ($160 per year per title), then the cost per article under the equal-revenue model comes out to $6,162.58. (The per article cost increased to $6,491.69, if you assume no print copy distribution.) Either figure is way more than most estimates of cost per article that have been cited in the literature. All of the institutions in the study would actually pay less under an open access model if the average cost per article was below $3,363. That includes, again, the largest research university (Michigan), which comes out at exactly break-even at that dollar figure. (This assumes author fees are fully paid by the university and that the journals have no alternative sources of revenue.) Of course the actual average cost per article is in much debate. But this clearly shows that if, for example, the Springer Open Choice model ($3000 per article author fee) was adopted across the board for all journals in these fields, there would be substantial savings for all of the institutions in the study. Savings would be greatest for the comprehensive universities (around 90% or more of current costs), somewhat smaller (but still very large) for the liberal arts colleges, smaller still for the doctoral universities (about 70% for Brandeis, for example), and smallest for the largest research institutions. But there would still be significant savings even for the latter group. Michigan, for example, would reduce its journal costs in those fields by $67,663 - more than 10% of current costs. I would also note that Bill=92s study, like the earlier Cornell study, does not take into account the question of grant funds supporting authors' fees. That would likely be an accepted practice under the open access model in some of the fields he studied. Those funds should not be counted as institutional costs. The study also does not factor in other possible sources of revenue for open access journals, other than authors fees. So my conclusion is that this study presents some very interesting data that deserve close analysis. The data clearly show--for the journals in the fields studied--that most universities and colleges would have substantial savings under an open access model. The large research university in the study were anywhere below $3,363. It would "pay" more if fees were above that level. (I say "pay" in quotation marks because some funding would be supported by research grants. I also note again that not all open access revenue has to come from authors' fees. To the extent that either of these proves possible, it increases the threshold article fee level where all institutions save.) Given all of the above, I don't think it's justified to conclude that the data in the study support the conclusions of the Cornell study, which asserted that the largest research universities (actually the largest research libraries) would pay more under an open access model. Based on Bill's data, that only happens if authors' fees exceed a certain level (in the range of $3,363, as illustrated by the case of Michigan). In addition, the model in the Cornell study was far to preliminary to justify the broad conclusions that were drawn from it. As I indicated in a lengthy post to the SCHOLCOMM list on January 24, 2005, the Cornell study failed to take major factors into account. Some factors that were not built into the Cornell model included: support of authors' fees from grant funds, variations in price per article by broad disciplinary categories (the study assumed average costs in science fields would also apply to humanities and social sciences - which clearly is not the case), and the number of articles in broad disciplinary categories being generated at each institution. Ray English Director of Libraries Oberlin College 440-775-8287
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