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Re: Self-Archiving and Journal Subscriptions: Critique of PRC Study
Rick:
The money that is paid for subscriptions now is coming from the
overhead that the universities are imposing on the research
grants. The university takes, say, 40%, of which 1% goes to the
library subscription budget. If that 1% is saved, but the
university then refuses to cover the author charges (which if
Gold OA is as expensive as TA publishing would be the same 1%),
then this 1% would be taken from the remaining 60% of the
research budget. This is merely shifting the division from 40% +
60% to 41% + 59%.
Is this really bad? If it was, why don't I see people campaigning
for lowering the universities overhead imposed on research grants
in general. If 40 + 60 is much better than 41 + 59, then 30 + 70
should be several times better. If, according to you, there is no
way that 41 + 59 can fail to reduce the amount of research done,
then, according to you, there is no way 30 + 70 can fail to
significantly *increase* the amount of research done.
Some might say that the subscription money and the author charges
may end up being coming from two different pockets. But these two
pockets are in the same jacket. The research funder gives the
money to researchers. The university of these researchers decides
how much of this money goes into the two pockets. Publishing
costs or not, if you think money in the left pocket is so much
better for the society than the money in the right pocket, then
ask the universities to put more money in it. It is all money
from the research funders anyway, right?!
Best regards,
Ahmed Hindawi
Rick Anderson wrote:
While I can agree with much of what Rick Anderson says here,
his last sentence is puzzling. As one of the serious problems
of Gold OA he quotes "the significant amount of money that a
widespread Gold OA solution would redirect from needed
research."
How so? Why would publishing become more expensive when the
way to sustain it changes? If one thinks that Gold OA would
redirect a significant amount of money away from needed
research, what about subscriptions? Don't subscriptions do the
same? Doesn't any money that sustains journals?
The money that currently supports commercial journals comes
from library budgets and from individual subscribers, not from
granting agencies. If all of the expensive journals to which
my library subscribes were suddenly to move to an author-funded
OA publishing model (and therefore become freely available to
the public), the most likely scenario is that my institution
would (quite rationally) drastically cut the library budget.
The savings would be redirected to other areas of the
university where they are sorely needed, and authors would
write their publication costs into their grant proposals.
Money from granting agencies that would have supported research
will thereby end up subsidizing free public access to the
research results.
Is that a good thing or a bad thing? It depends: will the
general public benefit more from universal free access to a
smaller amount of research or from toll-based access to more
research? The answer may vary -- but there's no way that
redirecting research funds towards publication can fail to
reduce the amount of research done.
---
Rick Anderson
Dir. of Resource Acquisition
University of Nevada, Reno Libraries
rickand@unr.edu