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Re: Potential positive spiral in transition to open access
- To: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Subject: Re: Potential positive spiral in transition to open access
- From: sgt3@psu.edu
- Date: Thu, 14 Jun 2007 20:47:44 EDT
- Reply-to: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Sender: owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
The assumption underlying such scenarios is that savings from library subscriptions will be applied to supporting more open access publishing. That is just not the way universities work, as James O'Donnell and others have pointed out on this listserv, so any such schemes are doomed to failure unless they can find a way to make this shifting of funding work in the way they hope it will.
Sandy Thatcher
Penn State Press
The economics of transitioning to open access is a challenge -but not one without tremendous benefits, not only for access, but for the economics of scholarly communication, in my opinion.
This is a topic I explore in a recent blogpost, A Potential Positive Cycle: More Access, More Funds.
Abstract
Hypothesis: a process of transitioning to open access can unleash funds, creating a positive cycle of increasing access and freed funds to create more open access; the very opposite of the negative serials pricing spiral of recent decades, which featured increasing prices and decreasing access.
As support for this hypothesis, this post looks at the potential for open access if libraries were to focus on high-priced journals (US $1,000 or more for an institutional subscription),and succeed in working with their faculty to convert just 10% to a volunteer / in- kind support model.
It is estimated with such a scenario, that individual libraries could save up to $450,000 US from their budgets after spending on open access journal support is factored in. The cumulative savings for libraries are potentially huge; for example, if the ARL libraries subscribed to just a quarter of these journals each, the annual savings for ARL would be in the order of $13.8million annually. This would only be a fraction of the savings for libraries, as ARL is only a subset of libraries, albeit large ones. The true collective savings for libraries would have to factor in libraries around the globe, including libraries in Europe and the somewhat smaller libraries in North America. If these savings were invested in further open access initatives,libraries would save even more, freeing up more funds to create more access.
For details and calculations, please see the full blogpost
at:http://poeticeconomics.blogspot.com/2007/06/potential-positive-cycle-more-access.html
While the focus of this blogpost is freeing funds for more open access, the same theoretical approach could be used to free funds to restore funding for scholarly monographs, humanities and social sciences, etc., that was lost in recent decades due to the serials pricing crisis.
Comments?
Any opinion expressed in this post is that of the author alone, and does not reflect the opinion or policy of BC Electronic Library Network or Simon Fraser University Library.
Heather Morrison, MLIS
The Imaginary Journal of Poetic Economics
http://poeticeconomics.blogspot.com
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