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Re: Institutional Journal Costs in an Open Access Environment
Jan Velterop wrote:
"Assuming that the total amount of money involved in the
aggregate remains the same, redistribution of costs has the
important academic and societal benefit of enabling full open
access. Given that the funders (mostly governments) inject this
money into the system anyway, this could be a winners-only game,
the funders, academia, and society as a whole being the winners."
Phil Davis responds:
Jan's response assumes that all grant money coming into a
university stays in research. There is nothing farther from the
truth. At Cornell University, a leading research institution and
a net producer of research, the overhead rate for incoming grants
is 58%. This means that only 42% of incoming grant money is
directly allocated to the researcher. The other money goes into
a big pot of money that covers everything from heating and
lighting, to mowing the law. The library (part of the overhead
of an institution) gets about 1-2% of university operating costs.
Having 58% of federally-funded research costs going to
institutional costs that don't directly cover research means that
we don't just have reallocation issues to deal with, we have a
major shortfall that would need to be picked up by research
institutions to support publishing.
Secondly, Jan's argument assumes that researchers are happily
willing to part with some of their research windfall to devote to
publishing costs. Given that page-charges are mostly an historic
relic, kept alive in a few fields like biology, this seems
unlikely. In spite of large grants in the Physical Sciences,
physicists appear to be quite intolerant of having to pay to
publish. Just over ten years ago the journal Physical Review D
(High Energy Physics) reinstated page charges for authors. In the
words of the Editor-in-Chief of the American Physical Society:
"What happened was that people started boycotting our journal and
started publishing in Nuclear Physics [a journal published by
Elsevier], which did not have page charges but which cost about
10 times as much on a per page basis to the institution. If page
charges and article charges have to be paid out of the authors'
grants, as happens in the U.S., then the authors are faced with a
dilemma. Either they pay the page charges or they send a post-doc
or a graduate student to a meeting. The cost would be about the
same. It is not going to be easy to convert to [the author-pays]
mode of operation."
[1] R. Ramachandran, "We Have to Be Able to Recover Our Costs.
Interview with Prof. Martin Blume, Editor-in-Chief, American
Physical Society." Frontline 21.2 (17-30 Jan. 2004):
http://flonnet.com/fl2102/stories/20040130001308200.htm
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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