[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

AAP-PSP on FRPAA



Further to the AAP-PSP Statement in opposition to the Cornyn- Lieberman Bill, at: http://www.library.yale.edu/~llicense/ListArchives/0605/msg00067.html

Peter Suber has written a thoughtful and thorough response to all of
the points brought forth by AAP-PSP, on Open Access News at:
http://www.earlham.edu/~peters/fos/
2006_05_07_fosblogarchive.html#114726726169346460

Following is the text of Peter's comments. For further information,
please see the blogpost, which contains links to sources for
verification or elaboration.

Comments. Let's look at the major claims here one at a time.

1. On the feared loss of revenue, my response is two-sided. On the one hand, there are good reasons to think that the FRPAA will not harm subscriptions. On the other hand, if it does, the public interest takes precedence. The mission of the publicly-funded research agencies is to advance science and research, not to protect the revenues of private-sector businesses.

2. The claim that FRPAA is "duplicative" is simply false. Some publishers are providing OA to some content when it's sufficiently old. But this is a far cry from providing OA to virtually all federally-funded research within six months of publication. If publishers are saying that over time their voluntary efforts will approach what FRPAA would mandate, then they have to give up their claim that this will harm journals. They can't have it both ways.

3. The claim that "[f]ull public access to scientific articles
based on government funding has always been central to our mission" --
if it refers to open access and not to toll access-- is simply false.
It hasn't been the AAP/PSP policy and it's not its policy now.

4. The claim that peer-reviewed journal literature is available in public libraries is generally false. Very few public libraries carry scholarly journals. FRPAA is necessary because even academic researchers don't have sufficient access to the literature through academic libraries.

5. The claim that FRPAA would "create unnecessary costs for taxpayers" begs the question. The Senators, university and library groups, and scientists think this expense is necessary --even to give full effect to the existing investment in research. Only publishers with a conflicting economic interest think it's unnecessary. In any case, how much are we talking about? The NIH estimates that the cost of its public-access program (even at 100% compliance) is only $2-4 million/year, about 0.01% of its annual budget. By contrast, the NIH spends $30 million/year on page charges and other subsidies to subscription-based journals. It's unseemly --and imprudent-- for the private-sector beneficiares of this largess to complain that a comparative pittance spent in the public interest is wasted. They might trigger an inquiry showing that the subsidy to journals that lock content away from the public is the truly unnecessary cost for taxpayers.

6. The claim that FRPAA would "expropriate the value-added investments made by scientific publishers" is false. FRPAA only applies to the final version of the author's peer-reviewed manuscript, not to the published version. It's very true that peer review is added value, but the bulk of that value is added by scholars donating their time and labor. No other form of added value is at stake here. Publishers add value through copy editing and mark- up, but under FRPAA they retain the exclusive right to distribute the articles with those enhancements --not just for six months but for 95 years (the life of copyright).

7. The claim that any threat to publisher revenue is a threat to peer review is an old canard. First, as noted, the critical parts of peer review are performed by uncompensated scholars. Second, peer review is performed by a growing number of high-quality OA journals, not just by subscription-based journals.

8. The claim that the NIH policy is doing fine without a mandate is simply false, as is the claim that we haven't given it enough time. After one year of operation, the compliance rate is below 4%. The glass isn't even half full. There's no room for hopeful spin here. Publishers want the voluntary policy to work well enough to head off a mandate, but when groups without the same axe to grind look at the evidence, groups like the NIH's own Public Access Working Group and the National Library of Medicine's Board of Regents, they conclude that the voluntary policy has failed and that a mandate is necessary to raise the compliance rate.

9. The AAP calls for another study. But it knows very well that there's no empirical evidence, outside physics, on how high-volume OA archiving will affect journal subscriptions. And in physics, publishers themselves acknowleldge that OA archiving has not caused journal cancellations. In fact, two journal publishers in physics, the Institute of Pysics and the American Physical Society, host mirrors of arXiv, the OA repository that is supposed to threaten them. The only way to generate the kind of evidence that the AAP wants is to stimulate high-volume OA archiving in fields outside physics --for example, by adopting the FRPAA-- and study the results. In the absence of that, the call for another study is just a delaying tactic.

10. Moreover, Senators Cornyn and Lieberman are not acting in an information vacuum. There's ample evidence that the current subscription system is dysfunctional. When the University of California studied the evidence in 2004, it concluded that "[t]he economics of [subscription-based] scholarly journal publishing are incontrovertibly unsustainable."

Heather Morrison
http://poeticeconomics.blogspot.com