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Re: Information Access Alliance Urges DOJ & FTC to Explore Remedies for Journal Bundling: Comments Available on Web
I am sorry that Ray, whose abilities as an advocate I admire, has
added his last two sentences. All of us have "day jobs" but to
post in this tendentious fashion and then refuse to answer
comments seems to me to be inappropriate. I can see that he might
not want to answer comments because his has in fact contradicted
himself. No library or library consortia have to enter into these
big deals. That is the fact. Surely all publishers still offer
their journals one by one. This is the alternative. All this
stuff about anti-competitive seems to me to be a waste of the
funding that tax payers eventually give to the ARL. But I am not
a lawyer
I have a long record of being doubtful about Big Deals and
published in Against-the-Grain some time ago expressing these
doubts. However the Big Deals were not a nasty plot of commercial
publishers. The first such arrangements were as a result of
serious and productive conversations between people like Tom
Sanville and emissaries of JISC in the UK talking to senior
publishers how the benefits of the digital environment could be
passed on to the scholars. The enthusiasm for such deals among
publishers and librarians is a matter of history.
The economic framework for the deals is agreed to be less than
perfect by all parties including publishers but so far no
alternative model has got acceptance. Pieter Bolman (an
originator of the current model when he was CEO of Academic) told
a meeting last year that he was amazed the original model is
still more or less in place. That model was (as described at the
time) a win/win/win arrangement and any new model needs to be the
same.
I can understand the problem for librarians. It is sad that the
organisations acting on behalf of the library community do not
press for more funding instead of mounting the expensive
campaigns they do spend their time on. It is needed and will
continue to be needed. Whatever model of scholarly communication
comes about (assuming that it provides the same level of service
as the current model) it likely to continue to be more and more
expensive because there is more and more research in the world
and more and more publications being submitted and accepted by
the peers of peer review as worthwhile. My understanding from the
postings of David Goodman is that he sees this problem and argues
for a cut down version of the current system - which is honest
and productive but is probably (a guess) not wished for by many
other scholars.
Anthony Watkinson
Centre for Publishing
University College London
I shall add that my colleagues at UCL are working with a team
that includes Carol Tenopir on the usage logs of OhioLink but I
am not involved directly in this work.
----- Original Message -----
From: "Ray English" <Ray.English@oberlin.edu>
To: "Liblicense L" <liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu>
Sent: Monday, February 05, 2007 11:26 PM
Subject: Re: Information Access Alliance Urges DOJ & FTC to Explore Remedies
for Journal Bundling: Comments Available on Web
This posting is intended to provide background on why the large
electronic journal agreements are of concern to many libraries
and why they may be anticompetitive.
Most libraries are faced with virtually an all of nothing
choice with the large bundled deals. In most instances the
rates of overall price increase for the deals are much higher
that the rates of increase for library budgets. Libraries
either accept rising prices for the bundle as a whole and let
the bundle eat up more and more of their budgets - or they take
the drastic step that was recently taken by Norway (in the case
of the Blackwell license) and cancel the agreements, living
with a total loss of access. It's a rare exception for a
consortium to have successfully negotiated some control over
content (including the ability to deselect specific titles)
that allows them to moderate the overall rate of increase for a
specific deal. Most consortia and most libraries are therefore
caught in a terrible dilemma, as was described eloquently by
Ken Frazier in his classic D-Lib piece several years ago.
See: http://www.dlib.org/dlib/march01/frazier/03frazier.html
Libraries either let prices increase at rates greater than
their budget increases (with negative effects on subscriptions
outside the bundle and on their monograph budgets) or they go
cold turkey and try to live with the consequences of lack of
access in hopes of getting better terms. Norway is the first
example of a group of libraries that's chosen the latter
course. It is true that libraries don't have to enter into the
agreements. But if they don't, then the prices for individual
titles (from the same publisher) that they subscribe to will
still continue to increase at rates that are unsustainable and
they'll lack the additional journal access that come with the
bundled package.
I would guess that most libraries don't feel they don't'
actually have a real choice. That's a sentiment that I've
heard from several quarters. Even if it was determined by
antitrust authorities that libraries do have choice about
entering into such agreements, those same authorities might
find that aspects of the agreements - in terms of their effect
on the broader market - are anticompetitive. That's a legal
question that I'm not in a position to answer. But it's also
one that I think antitrust authorities need to look at and
decide.
The basic argument against the large electronic license
agreements is that they may be anticompetitive in two ways.
First, by taking away choice on the part of libraries they
create budgetary pressure on titles that are not under such
agreements, leading to cancellations of those journals.
Society journals and independent journals that are not part of
electronic packages are therefore particularly vulnerable.
Second, the agreements create barriers to entry for new
journals, since the new titles can't compete on a
title-by-title basis with journals that are in the bundles.
The basic legal argument that the large deals are
anticompetitive has been made by Aaron Edlin and Dan Rubenfeld
in an article in the Antitrust Law Journal. They've also
published a more general economic discussion of electronic
licenses in the American Economic Review. See Edlin's website
for access to both, specifically the first two pieces under
"Antitrust, Industrial Organization, and Competition Policy":
http://works.bepress.com/aaron_edlin/
I'm sorry that I won't have time to engage in an ongoing
exchange following this post. I offer it for clarification and
leave it to others to carry the discussion forward.
Ray English
Director of Libraries
Oberlin College