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RE: Interview with Springer's Derk Haank
- To: <liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu>
- Subject: RE: Interview with Springer's Derk Haank
- From: "Ivy Anderson" <Ivy.Anderson@ucop.edu>
- Date: Tue, 25 Jan 2011 22:38:27 EST
- Reply-to: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Sender: owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
Apologies for weighing in a bit late on this thread, but I do think that some additional perspective is warranted on the questions that Sandy posed. While I appreciate the views of my good colleagues Warren and Syun, as well as those of Mr. Haank, there is more to this story. The large publisher deals have indeed expanded access and lowered the unit cost of journals for many libraries. ARL charts clearly show these effects beginning in around 2000, and it would be disingenuous to claim otherwise. In this sense, Mr. Haank is right when he says that the big deals ameliorated the serials crisis of an earlier era. What is less salubrious about these arrangements however, is the way in which they have locked up library budgets in large, single-block expenditures. If the great invention of sliced bread is the slices, then these deals do not qualify because the loaves are frozen and typically unsliceable. On top of that, unfortunately many structural problems remain in this market. The problems can be illustrated by juxtaposing two other well-known charts, one from ARL documenting the long decline in the proportion of research university funding allocated toward libraries, and another reproduced by STM documenting the equally steady increase in journal publication over time. These trends have long been on a collision course, one that's being hastened by the current economic downturn. And as Sandy points out, the increasing budget share consumed by journal packages has squeezed university presses and other small market players to near-extinction and reduced the breadth and diversity of library collections, despite concomitant increases in book publishing. Large packages of books, while arguably offering similar value to the journal big deal, are nonetheless no easier for libraries to fund than their individual counterparts when the aggregate spend is sufficiently large. As more and more purchasing becomes locked in large block expenditures, it is becoming impossible for libraries to maneuver. And with double-digit declines still looming on the horizon for many libraries, maneuver we must. What to do? Of course, there are many efforts afoot aimed at producing authentic transformation in the form of dramatically lower production costs and barrier-free access, as well as important initiatives to re-introduce more non-library sources of funding to sustain the academic publishing enterprise. But on a more incremental scale, and within the market as it exists today, there is at least one key adjustment to these deals that can help. We can collectively weather the current economic crisis by recognizing that the unit costs inherent in the 'big deal' are the new norm and making it possible to scale these deals up and down in proportional ways as funding ebbs and flows, without reverting to the truly unsustainable pricing of an earlier era. The unit-cost gains of the big deal that Mr. Haank rightly notes - redressing an old and egregious imbalance - need to be preserved in the face of current economic challenges. It will have proven to be no gain at all if these arrangements cannot be proportionately dialed back to accommodate new funding realities. Unless we can find a way to do that, our frozen bread with the slices stuck firmly together will become inedible indeed. Ivy Anderson Director of Collections California Digital Library University of California, Office of the President -----Original Message----- From: owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu [mailto:owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu] On Behalf Of Sandy Thatcher Sent: Friday, January 21, 2011 6:23 PM To: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu; warren.holder@utoronto.ca Subject: Re: Interview with Springer's Derk Haank Maybe for the big publishers and maybe for some libraries, but certainly not for all the smaller journal publishers whose journals get dropped because the Big Deals cost so much, not to mention the publishers of monographs whose sales have flatlined for years because of STM journal subscription costs. And how does that make this the best invention for scholarship overall? Sandy Thatcher At 8:25 PM -0500 1/19/11, Syun Tutiya wrote: >Dear Sandy and Warren, > >Warren says: > >> I tend not to respond to set ups like this for fear that I will >> get inundated with responses that I do not have the time or >> inclination to deal with. So with that caveat, I will tell you >> that I am a librarian who has been involved with the licensing >> of e-resources for over 14 years and I agree with Derk Haank. > >I am not a genuine librarian, but have been involved in e-journal >etc licensing negotiations since 1999, in the other side of your >world in the geographical and perhaps in the historical sense. >I agree with Warren, who agrees with Derk Haank. The Big Deal is >the best invention as we can imagine. > >Best, > >Syun
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