Periodicals Price Survey 2007: Serial Wars

As open access gains ground, STM publishers change tactics, and librarians ask hard questions

In a year filled with drama and hyperbole, the serials marketplace churned toward a future whose shape is the subject of fierce debate. Forecasts from commercial publishers touting collapse and disaster seemed oddly out of sync with the profits they enjoyed—around 25 percent on average. Nevertheless, in a market where prices continued to rise and bundled content continued to sell, some of the very publishers whose fortunes are made in scientific, technical, and medical (STM) journals all but declared that the open access (OA) movement is apocalyptic in scope and will lead to the end of journals as we know them. Open access is no longer a subtext in the annals of the journals industry. It stands alone as an alternative to the existing system of journal publication, which most say is unsustainable in its current form. It can mean different things to different proponents—a shared path to many ends. Libraries want relief from journal prices that are patently outrageous and defy cost-benefit justification. Authors want impact, and OA articles get cited much more often. Scientists want faster and easier access to others’ research, but a recent paper, “UK Scholarly Journals: 2006 Baseline Report,” found that half of all researchers in Britain have problems securing access to needed articles. Universities want a better return on their investment in intellectual capital, authors, peer reviewers, and editors. Taxpayers want to be able to read the research they sponsor.

In defense of the status quo

STM publishers vigorously defend the adequacy of the current system, downplaying the extent of concerns like those above and questioning the merits of the OA movement. However, they have made concessions to scholars who want their work to be open access by allowing them to archive a version of their peer-reviewed articles on the web or in an institutional repository after an embargo. They have also made concessions on the business side of things. They have designed hybrid OA programs in an effort to control economic risk while experimenting with a new business model that allows authors to pay publication costs up-front to make their peer-reviewed articles immediately free to readers. Authors get the added exposure that open access brings, and publishers get a new revenue stream, which may or may not translate into lower subscription costs for libraries. One could say that publishers and OA proponents have made strides in finding common ground. So what caused publishers to ratchet up the rhetoric of opposition over the winter months? Support for OA is accelerating worldwide, and therein may lie the answer. The very speed of its growth must be alarming to publishers. For example, almost 2600 peer-reviewed journals are listed in the Directory of Open Access Journals—a 25 percent increase over the year before—and over 200 of the titles are tracked for impact by Thomson-ISI. Despite strong publisher opposition, five of Britain’s eight Research Councils adopted self-archiving mandates for the recipients of their research grants. Policy discussions in Europe, the United States, and other regions around the world may lead to similar mandates, potentially affecting a huge percentage of articles published by the top scientific houses. Publishers seemed to take particular notice when administrators at many prestigious American universities threw their weight behind the Federal Research Public Access Act (FRPAA), a sweeping legislative proposal with an OA mandate. The universities’ involvement brings the issue right to the doorstep of the scholars/authors whose lack of awareness of market issues has always worked in publishers’ favor. Aside from the commotion over open access, the serials market continued to reflect the trends of recent years. Bundled content kept library and consortia budgets tied up and kept publishers’ sales reps busy negotiating prices, one contract at a time. Serials agents and publishers continued to build infrastructure to manage online subscriptions in an era when list prices are being replaced by individualized deals. Mergers and rumors of acquisitions and buyouts renewed concerns about market consolidation. Google and Google Scholar went head to head with mature abstracting and indexing tools that direct readers to scholarly journal articles. Google usually won. More change is coming, and the common wisdom suggests that new business models will move the money around in ways that are hard to imagine just now. This year’s Periodicals Price Survey looks at these and other factors shaping the journals marketplace. Three Institute for Scientific Information (ISI) databases—Arts and Humanities Citation Index, Social Sciences Citation Index, and Science Citation Index—again provide the bulk of titles used in the study. In addition, we include data on titles in EBSCO Publishing’s Academic Search Premier. The data are limited to prepriced titles (as opposed to standing-order or bill-later titles) that can be ordered through a vendor and are current as of February 7, 2007.

Doing the numbers

If some publishers think the OA movement will rob them of their livelihoods, you can’t tell it from their balance sheets. According to a September report from Outsell, a market research company, the top ten STM publishers bring in almost 43 percent of the revenue in a market that totals just over $19 billion. The big STM publishers are in a mature market, however, and their sales growth is beginning to come under some pressure. While in the past, publishers grew profits by levying double-digit price increases on library subscribers, that no longer works because library budgets are tapped out. So publishers have turned to acquisitions (mergers) and bundled content—the former to procure top-line revenue, assets, and operating efficiencies, and the latter to lock in their revenue stream and force the other guy out of the market.

Going, going, gone

In 2006, the seven dominant commercial STM journal publishers were Elsevier, Wiley, Springer, Taylor & Francis (T&F), Kluwer Medical, Thomson, and Blackwell. Wiley and Blackwell are merging. The U.S. Department of Justice has denied appeals to review that merger, and the European Union (EU) has already allowed larger mergers to proceed, so it is not likely to stop it. As a result, the handful of publishers with which academic libraries do the bulk of their business will shrink from seven to six. About half of Blackwell’s titles are published for scholarly societies, and we could see some societies move to other publishers as a result of the merger. Rumors persist that Elsevier and Kluwer Medical may merge. And then there were five? Reuters announced in late February that Candover and Cinven, the venture capitalists who brought Springer and Kluwer together as Springer Science and Media Business, are preparing to float the company on the London Exchange with a valuation in the neighborhood of two billion euros. Springer could be bought by another publisher, or the sale of stock might be intended to raise capital for future acquisitions. The company has been trying to acquire T&F, for example. The increasing concentration of top publishers draws attention to the saturated condition of the scientific publishing market. Revenue and profit growth expected by shareholders can no longer be obtained by the publisher’s own stable of journal titles. Larger profits today depend on assimilating the competition.

Hybrids catch on

Thirteen publishers began offering a hybrid OA option to authors in 2006, joining earlier pioneers Springer, the American Institute of Physics, Blackwell, Oxford University Press (OUP), and the Company of Biologists. Elsevier, Wiley, and T&F were among that baker’s dozen, meaning that most of the major STM publishers now allow authors to make an article open access from birth for at least some of their journals. Cost per article runs from a low of $975 for select journals from the American Physical Society to a high of $3100 for an article in one of the T&F journals. Charges are sometimes discounted if the author’s institution subscribes. Only a handful of these hybrid programs include returning copyrights to authors in the full spirit of OA, and a few publishers have tightened restrictions on self-archiving, which actually works against earlier gains.

Easier said than done

The rapid shift to electronic over print subscriptions and the attendant rise of negotiated multiyear contracts for large bundles of journals disrupted the longstanding relationship between publishers and subscription agents. Major publishers began to sell directly to customers, cutting the agent out of the process in many cases. They built sales forces to market bundles and negotiate contracts and added customer service departments in the back of the house to handle billings and renewals. As the contracts have stacked up, however, publishers and librarians continue to grapple with managing countless pay cycles, individualized multiyear contracts, and the inevitable confusion that goes along with customers turning titles off and on while maintaining spending caps and cancellation limits. As the dust settles on the digital revolution, agents are reasserting the value they add to the market by designing tools that enable publishers and librarians to manage the new complexities and services that come with online business practices.

Putting a price on value

Librarians aren’t waiting to see what kind of price relief the OA movement might bring. They are beginning to ask hard questions about the relationship between the value of a journal and its price. In January, University of California (UC) Libraries disseminated a pilot study on value-based journal pricing. UC used the Bergstrom-McAfee calculations for value-pricing as the basis of the study but included other metrics as well, such as the university system’s contributions to the publishing process (author, editor, reviewer services), cost savings to publishers from economies of marketing and selling to consortia, and normative range of cost increases for the industry as a whole, defined by the Producer Price Index. The report is a first attempt to construct a complex, values-based model for the scholarly journals marketplace. Authors of the study acknowledge that refinements are needed, and they challenge publishers, librarians, and other stakeholders to join them in furthering the analysis and developing the model. It is good to note, however, that UC will push for more than a conversation. The stated goal of the study is actively to influence the journal pricing market. The UC study underscores the message to heavy-hitting publishers that intransigent pricing policies are driving customers to seek pricing relief one way or another. Either the current system flexes to address concerns over price and access, or a new system will take its place.

Information wants to be free

In 2006, we saw an upsurge in the global interest in “freeing” the information created by public funds. The interest coalesced into the “free-information” movement and spawned dozens of OA policy initiatives around the world. The practice of self-archiving that is at the heart of these policies is the same one already permitted by most publishers. The difference is the mandate. Publishers know that most scholars don’t archive unless someone makes them do it. Mandates would force them do it. Publishers fear that once the practice of postpublication archiving becomes widespread, a rash of subscription cancellations will follow, embargoes notwithstanding.

Axis of OA

Open access initiatives in the United States and Europe exemplify the policy mandates that publishers most fear. In this country, the FRPAA is waiting to be reintroduced in the Senate. FRPAA would enforce open access of articles that result from any government-sponsored grant program of a certain size within six months of publication, pushing the free information principle into all areas of federally funded research. Also under consideration in the Congress is a set of recommendations from two advisory groups to strengthen the National Institute of Health’s self-archiving policy from a request to an edict that grantees deposit research articles in PubMed Central. The recommendations also call for shortening the embargo period from 12 to six months, but that proposal is not expected to pass. The strongest OA momentum at this writing seems to be in Europe, where the European Commission, the EU’s executive body, has been aggressively pursuing policy development around the issue of access to scientific information. Last year’s Study on the Economic and Technical Evolution of the Scientific Publication Markets of Europe advised a mandate for open access to research funded by the EU. In the lead up to a February 2007 conference to review recommendations from the study, over 19,000 individuals and representatives of institutions around the world signed a petition urging their adoption. In addition, a preconference poll showed that 86 percent of principle investigators with current EU grants favored open access to the findings they plan to publish. The conference failed to produce the mandate favored by petitioners and poll respondents, but the EU left the door open for further guidelines. This result was less than OA proponents hoped for and no doubt less than publishers feared.

PR that bites

Faced with mounting evidence that OA directives are rapidly gaining support, a coalition of publishers last winter turned to shock language and political hardball to try to keep them from passing. Two of the strategies backfired. As reported in Nature (1/25/07), the Association of American Publishers (AAP) hired a notorious PR firm for between $300,000 and $500,000 to launch a campaign of disinformation against FRPAA. Both the AAP and the publishers associated with the story (American Chemical Society, Elsevier, and Wiley) were skewered in the scholarly and public media as a result. Then in February came the announcement of the Brussels Declaration, ten “self-evident” principles from STM publishers about science publishing. At the time of writing, the declaration wasn’t faring much better in its reception than the above-mentioned PR debacle. Taken together, these acts indicate, pundits suggest, that war has, in essence, been declared by publishers on policy-driven OA initiatives.

Tough questions

The relationship between journal prices and the OA movement remains unclear since a relatively small percentage of journals so far offer free content. Also unclear is the relationship between the practice of self-archiving and its effect on subscription cancellations. If many peer-reviewed articles are free on the web after a short waiting period, will a library cancel its subscription to the journal that initially publishes the articles? Is it a problem that the free version isn’t the final publisher’s version? These are critical questions for publishers, librarians, and scholars, but studies designed to answer them come up with conflicting data. At this point, evidence tilts toward libraries keeping the subscriptions, but it is easy to see how that might change as more content makes its way into repositories and onto author web sites.

What to expect in 2008

In 2007, academic libraries saw overall journal price increases just under eight percent for the second year in a row. U.S. titles rose nine percent on average; non-U.S., 7.3 percent. The dollar is expected to strengthen against the pound and fall against the euro as renewal season approaches, but no significant currency effect on journal prices is anticipated. Expect overall price increases to be in the seven percent to nine percent range for 2008 subscriptions.

TABLE 1: AVERAGE 2007 PRICE FOR SCIENTIFIC DISCIPLINES

Discipline Average Price Per Title
Chemistry $3,429
Physics 2,865
Engineering 2,071
Biology 1,676
Technology 1,502
Astronomy 1,426
Geology 1,424
Food Science 1,345
Math & Computer Science $1,313
Zoology 1,308
Health Sciences 1,199
Botany 1,179
General Science 1,139
Geography 1,050
Agriculture 898
SOURCE: LJ PERIODICALS PRICE SURVEY 2007
 

TABLE 2: COST HISTORY GROUPED BY LIBRARY OF CONGRESS SUBJECT

Subject Average No. of Titles 2003–2007 Average Cost Per Title 2003 Average Cost Per Title 2004 % of Change ’03–’04 Average Cost Per Title 2005 % of Change ’04–’05 Average Cost Per Title 2006 % of Change ’05–’06 Average Cost Per Title 2007 % of Change ’06–’07 % of Change ’03–’07
Agriculture 176 $ 647 $738 14 $787 7 $836 6 $898 7 39
Anthropology 50 415 449 8 477 6 495 4 534 8 29
Art & Architecture 65 144 161 12 172 7 185 7 198 7 37
Astronomy 19 1,123 1,271 13 1,330 5 1,452 9 1,426 -2 27
Biology 213 1,207 1,314 9 1,412 7 1,536 9 1,676 9 39
Botany 53 830 919 11 1,002 9 1,097 9 1,179 8 42
Business & Economics 286 618 675 9 731 8 776 6 820 6 33
Chemistry 209 2,635 2,836 8 2,992 6 3,220 8 3,429 7 30
Education 99 309 341 10 377 11 411 9 451 10 46
Engineering 275 1,561 1,685 8 1,819 8 1,904 5 2,071 9 33
Food Science 15 978 1,090 11 1,188 9 1,280 8 1,345 5 38
General Science 64 865 924 7 983 6 1,064 8 1,139 7 32
General Works 69 186 202 9 218 8 224 3 238 6 28
Geography 68 808 887 10 920 4 959 4 1,050 9 30
Geology 84 1,079 1,166 8 1,249 7 1,328 6 1,424 7 32
Health Sciences 1413 846 925 9 1,001 8 1,098 10 1,199 9 42
History 214 143 161 12 176 9 186 6 203 9 42
Language & Literature 300 129 146 13 158 8 168 6 179 7 39
Law 74 176 194 10 202 4 224 11 247 11 40
Library & Information Science 50 319 354 11 393 11 440 12 502 14 57
Math & Computer Science 176 1,039 1,126 8 1,201 7 1,254 4 1,313 5 26
Military & Naval Science 7 472 511 8 558 9 606 9 660 9 40
Music 41 98 105 8 122 16 125 2 136 9 39
Philosophy & Religion 122 146 166 14 177 6 188 6 203 8 38
Physics 214 2,262 2,466 9 2,589 5 2,726 5 2,865 5 27
Political Science 57 292 337 15 368 9 400 9 446 12 53
Psychology 140 389 438 13 473 8 510 8 545 7 40
Recreation 15 116 125 8 144 15 149 3 165 11 42
Sociology 296 361 409 13 447 9 482 8 528 9 46
Technology 162 1,232 1,340 9 1,432 7 1,527 7 1,502 -2 22
Zoology 123 977 1,048 7 1,124 7 1,223 9 1,308 7 34
SOURCE: LJ PERIODICALS PRICE SURVEY 2007
 

TABLE 3: AVERAGE PRICE PER TITLE BY COUNTRY 2007

Country No. of ISI Titles Avg. Price Per Title
Netherlands 377 $3,362
Russia 57 2,907
Ireland 38 2,630
Austria 25 1,830
England 1485 1,357
Switzerland 91 1,355
Singapore 32 1,209
New Zealand 24 1,081
Germany 251 1,072
China 16 849
United States 2292 763
Australia 39 $434
Spain 14 413
France 108 406
Japan 74 364
Israel 12 322
Czech Republic 15 318
Italy 50 274
Norway 11 271
Canada 108 261
Scotland 12 245
India 12 209
AVERAGE COST OF AN ISI TITLE: $1,145
SOURCE: LJ PERIODICALS PRICE SURVEY 2007
 

TABLE 4: COST HISTORY BY CONTINENT / COUNTRY OF ORIGIN

Continent/Country Average No. of Titles 2003–2007 Average Cost Per Title 2003 Average Cost Per Title 2004 % of Change ’03–’04 Average Cost Per Title 2005 % of Change ’04–’05 Average Cost Per Title 2006 % of Change ’05–’06 Average Cost Per Title 2007 % of Change ’06–’07 % of Change ’03–’07
NORTH AMERICA
United States 2,262 $547 $593 9 $639 8 $699 10 $763 9 40
Canada 106 193 213 10 229 7 246 7 261 6 35
Other 9 102 112 10 120 7 107 -11 111 4 9
Average for all North America 2,377 529 575 9 618 8 677 9 738 9 39
EUROPE
France* 102 313 383 22 388 1 373 -4 406 9 30
Germany* 230 727 920 27 978 6 944 -3 1,072 14 47
Ireland* 38 1,991 2,130 7 2,325 9 2,463 6 2,630 7 32
Italy * 49 164 202 23 227 12 252 11 274 9 67
The Netherlands* 379 2,626 2,834 8 2,990 6 3,176 6 3,362 6 28
Switzerland 90 867 987 14 1,104 12 1,254 14 1,355 8 56
United Kingdom 1,474 970 1,067 10 1,156 8 1,239 7 1,344 8 38
Other 163 1,157 1,287 11 1,237 -4 1,371 11 1,476 8 28
Average for all Europe 2,526 1,189 1,311 10 1,386 6 1,467 6 1,579 8 33
ASIA
Japan 77 310 318 3 342 8 357 4 364 2 17
Other 80 762 769 1 810 5 871 7 884 2 16
Average for all Asia 157 525 534 2 578 8 617 7 662 7 26
AUSTRALIA AND NEW ZEALAND 63 451 505 12 561 11 613 9 680 11 51
SOUTH AMERICA 18 97 103 6 106 3 107 1 110 2 13
AFRICA 10 109 106 -3 111 4 130 17 157 21 43
*Included in European Monetary Union SOURCE: LJ PERIODICALS PRICE SURVEY 2007
 

TABLE 5: COST HISTORY BY BROAD SUBJECT

Average No. of Titles 2003–2007 Average Cost Per Title 2003 Average Cost Per Title 2004 % of Change ’03–’04 Average Cost Per Title 2005 % of Change ’04–’05 Average Cost Per Title 2006 % of Change ’05–’06 Average Cost Per Title 2007 % of Change ’06–’07 % of Change ’03–’07
ARTS AND HUMANITIES CITATION INDEX
U.S. 402 $93 $101 8.6- $107 5.9 $113 5.6 $121 7.1 30.1
NON–U.S. 560 157 182 15.9 195 7.1 201 3.1 219 9.0 39.5
SOCIAL SCIENCES CITATION INDEX
U.S. 876 298 327 9.7 355 8.6 385 8.5 423 9.9 41.9
NON–U.S. 754 565 630 11.5 684 8.6 732 7.0 785 7.2 38.9
SCIENCE CITATION INDEX
U.S. 1,265 868 936 7.8 1,005 7.4 1,101 9.6 1,193 8.4 37.4
NON–U.S. 2,034 1,477 1,606 8.7 1,708 6.% 1,820 6.6 1,948 7.0 31.9
SOURCE: LJ PERIODICALS PRICE SURVEY 2007
 

TABLE 6: 2008 COST PROJECTIONS BY BROAD SUBJECT

No. of Titles % of List 2007 Cost % of Cost Projected % of Increase Projected 2008 Cost % of Cost Projected Overall % Increase
ARTS AND HUMANITIES CITATION INDEX
U.S. 389 46.1 $46,957 32.1 7.0 $50,244 31.9 7.7
NON–U.S. 455 53.9 99,499 67.9 8.0 107,459 68.1 7.7
SOCIAL SCIENCES CITATION INDEX
U.S. 821 53.3 347,491 38.1 9.0 378,765 38.3 8.4
NON–U.S. 719 46.7 564,611 61.9 8.% 609,780 61.7 8.4
SCIENCE CITATION INDEX
U.S. 1,181 38.3 1,408,403 27.5 8.5 1,528,117 27.7 7.8
NON–U.S. 1,903 61.7 3,706,640 72.5 7.5 3,984,638 72 7.8
PROJECTED OVERALL INCREASE FOR ALL ISI TITLES: 7.9%
SOURCE: LJ PERIODICALS PRICE SURVEY 2007
 

TABLE 7: 2008 COST PROJECTIONS FOR TITLES IN ACADEMIC SEARCH PREMIER

Academic Search Premier No. of Titles % of List 2007 Cost % of Cost Projected % of Increase Projected 2008 Cost % of Cost Projected Overall % Increase
U.S. 1,396 40.7 $436 31.1 9.5 $477 31.0 9.8
NON–U.S. 2,035 59.3 968 68.9 10.0 1,065 69.0 9.8
SOURCE: LJ PERIODICALS PRICE SURVEY 2007
 

TABLE 8: COST HISTORY FOR TITLES IN ACADEMIC SEARCH PREMIER

Subject Average No. of Titles 2003–2007 Average Cost Per Title 2003 Average Cost Per Title 2004 % of Change ’03–’04 Average Cost Per Title 2005 % of Change ’04–’05 Average Cost Per Title 2006 % of Change ’05–’06 Average Cost Per Title 2007 % of Change ’06–’07 % of Change ’03–’07
Agriculture 71 $522 $654 25 $710 8 769 8 $834 8 60
Anthropology 30 233 267 15 310 16 347 12 387 12 66
Art & Architecture 43 178 196 11 214 9 239 12 264 10 49
Astronomy 19 1,326 1,453 10 1,548 7 1,665 8 1,817 9 37
Biology 100 938 1,055 12 1,202 14 1,316 10 1,484 13 58
Botany 26 832 969 17 1,100 13 1,287 17 1,397 9 68
Business & Economics 105 237 268 13 288 8 317 10 338 7 42
Chemistry 72 1,885 2,210 17 2,341 6 2,473 6 2,702 9 43
Education 232 256 290 13 327 13 358 9 395 10 54
Engineering 186 773 853 10 940 10 1,007 7 1,085 8 40
Food Science 18 363 434 19 472 9 528 12 590 12 62
General Science 50 511 571 12 610 7 659 8 703 7 37
General Works 76 84 91 8 97 8 107 9 115 8 38
Geography 46 338 381 13 428 12 467 9 513 10 52
Geology 26 584 662 13 734 11 735 0 803 9 37
Health Sciences 760 591 661 12 736 11 818 11 899 10 52
History 236 159 176 11 196 11 215 10 236 10 48
Language & Literature 127 131 149 13 166 11 184 11 199 8 52
Law 84 227 246 8 266 8 289 9 316 9 39
Library & Information Science 55 130 140 8 150 7 156 4 170 9 31
Math & Computer Science 135 824 918 11 1,007 10 1,104 10 1,167 6 42
Military & Naval Science 22 207 224 8 249 11 252 1 281 11 36
Music 22 121 122 0 145 19 163 12 174 7 43
Philosophy & Religion 165 163 183 12 199 9 228 14 252 11 55
Physics 103 1,950 2,096 7 2,292 9 2,479 8 2,770 12 42
Political Science 81 257 283 10 313 11 353 13 394 12 54
Psychology 88 352 397 13 445 12 497 12 536 8 52
Recreation 15 130 145 11 159 9 178 12 190 6 45
Sociology 238 250 280 12 306 10 355 16 388 9 55
Technology 74 783 846 8 940 11 1,022 9 1,102 8 41
Zoology 43 648 736 14 810 10 866 7 907 5 40
SOURCE: LJ PERIODICALS PRICE SURVEY 2007
 

TABLE 9: COST HISTORY FOR TITLES IN MAGAZINE ARTICLE SUMMARIES ULTRA

Magazine Article Summaries Ultra Average No. of Titles 2003–2007 Average Cost Per Title 2003 Average Cost Per Title 2004 % of Change ’03–’04 Average Cost Per Title 2005 % of Change ’04–’05 Average Cost Per Title 2006 % of Change ’05–’06 Average Cost Per Title 2007 % of Change ’06–’07 % of Change ’03–’07
U.S. 265 $61 $64 5 $67 5 $71 6 $74 4 21
NON–U.S. 40 129 142 10 155 9 175 13 187 7 45
SOURCE: LJ PERIODICALS PRICE SURVEY 2007
 
 

Periodical Prices for University and College Libraries

Table 8 gives price history by discipline for the journals found in EBSCO Publishing’s Academic Search Premier. Price projections for 2008 are found in Table 7.

Periodical Prices for High School and Small Public Libraries

Overall price increases for titles in EBSCO Publishing’s Magazine Article Summaries Ultra are expected to be in the range of 4%–6%. Table 9 provides historical price data for titles in the index.

Lee C. Van Orsdel is Dean of University Libraries, Grand Valley State University, Allendale, MI, and Kathleen Born is Director, Academic Division, EBSCO Informatiaon Services, Birmingham, AL
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