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Research funding agencies contribute to scholarship - and publishing
Research funding agencies are net contributors to scholarship,
and to scholarly publishing.
First, the funding provided makes it possible to do more
research. Researchers give away the articles made possible by the
research. Publishers pay nothing to the researcher, or to the
funding agency. Publishers also often benefit directly through
payment of traditional page charges, and indirectly through the
indirect costs of research which often help to pay for library
subscriptions. This source of revenue may not be obvious to the
publisher. The page charges are paid by the author (from funds
provided by the funding agency), the subscriptions by the library
(sometimes through funds made available through transfers from
departments with research funding).
To summarize this relationship: publishers are net beneficiaries
of public research funding, receiving free content and public
revenues both for production and subscriptions. Funding agencies
are net contributors.
Any opinion expressed in this e-mail is that of the author alone,
and does not represent 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