After
due deliberation, the Committee concluded that all publicly funded research
should be made freely available on an Open Access (OA) basis, and
that the traditional journal model — which currently sees most research locked
behind a subscription paywall — should be gradually discontinued.
The
Finch Report has been welcomed by publishers and their trade associations (e.g. here,
here
and here),
and by research funders (e.g. here
and here).
However, it has been received with a mixture of frustration, disbelief, and anger by some UK research universities, and by many OA advocates (e.g. here, here and here).
However, it has been received with a mixture of frustration, disbelief, and anger by some UK research universities, and by many OA advocates (e.g. here, here and here).
What
has dismayed critics is that in recommending the so-called gold route to OA (where
researchers pay to publish in OA journals), rather than the green route (where
they continue to publish in subscription journals at no cost, and then self-archive
their papers in an institutional repository) the Finch Report appears to have condemned the
research community to having to find an additional £50-60 million a year to publish its
research, at a time when university budgets are under severe pressure.
Since much of this additional money is expected to go into the pockets of publishers, some have charged the Finch Committee with succumbing to lobbying.
Since much of this additional money is expected to go into the pockets of publishers, some have charged the Finch Committee with succumbing to lobbying.
Others maintain
that if the Finch recommendations are implemented the number of research papers
published will have to be rationed.
What
do publishers make of the criticisms? To find out, I contacted Graham
Taylor, Director of Educational, Academic and Professional Publishing at the
UK-based Publishers Association. Our
email Q&A is below.
On lobbying
RP: The Finch Report recommends that all publicly funded research be made freely available on an Open Access basis, and that the traditional subscription model be phased out. The Publishers Association has welcomed the Report, describing it as a “’balanced package’ of recommendations for extending access to research outputs within the UK”.
By
contrast, many in the OA movement have greeted the Report with dismay. Stevan Harnad, for
instance, has described it as a product of “strong and palpable influence from
the publishing lobby”, and a “fiasco”. Meanwhile, David Price, Vice-Provost
(Research) at UCL, commented to
me that, “The result of the Finch recommendations
would be to cripple university systems with extra expense”. He added, “Finch is
certainly a cure to the problem of access, but is it not a cure which is
actually worse than the disease?”
What
is it that critics of the Report like this are not seeing that publishers do
see?
GT: In fact the report recommends that “a clear
policy direction should be set towards support for publication in open access
or hybrid journals, funded by APCs, as the main vehicle for the publication of
research, especially when it is publicly funded”. In proposing that the UK
“should embrace the transition to open access”, the report recognises that “the
process itself will be complicated” and that “no single channel can on its own
maximise research publications for the greatest number of people”.
It
was not us who described the report as a ‘balanced package’, but Finch herself:
“Our recommendations are presented as a balanced package, so it is critical
that they are implemented in a balanced and sustainable way, with continuing
close contact and dialogue between representatives in the key groups..” Most of
the reaction to Finch that I have seen has been supportive, and we wait to hear
what David Willetts will say to Janet Finch in reply.
The
PA was instrumental in proposing to Willetts in March last year that a
cross-sector representative stakeholder group might look at ways of extending
access to GLOBAL research publications for the benefit of UK researchers, so Finch
was always about more than OA for UK research.
The
12 members of the review group comprised delegates from the funders (HEFCE, Research Councils UK, Wellcome Trust), the learned societies (Society of Biology, Royal Graphical Society, Royal Society), the libraries (RLUK, British Library),
research institutes, and publishers. The three publishers represented commercial,
society and open access interests.
Finch
herself said that her report “will bring substantial benefits both for
researchers and everyone who has an interest in their work [it] shows how
representatives of the different stakeholder groups can work together to that
end.”
I
am not aware that any of the delegates felt the need to post a dissenting
opinion. I find it strange that publisher representatives tend to be described
as a ‘lobby’. What description is appropriate for the other delegates?
And
I don’t see how the relatively modest transition costs estimated in the report
can be described as ‘crippling’ given the scale of costs required to support
the UK research effort.
On costs
RP: Nevertheless, it is the issue of costs that appears to be the most controversial part of the Report. Finch estimates that if the recommendations are implemented it will cost an additional £50-60 million a year, although the Report concedes that this is an estimate only.
What
is your view: if the Finch recommendations are implemented, how much additional
money will the research community need to find, and how much of that money will
go to paying publishers (rather than, says, funding institutional repositories
etc.)? Will any of this additional money be a consequence of what OA advocates
call “double dipping” by
publishers?
GT: I am not qualified to comment on the transition
cost estimate put up by Finch, other than to say that it must derive from the
several recent economist reports sponsored by RIN,
JISC and others. I have no doubt that the
Finch secretariat, Michael
Jubb of RIN, will have taken these reports into account.
6%
of global research outputs derive from the UK, but if that is funded by APCs
then the UK alone must cover that cost, which was previously spread over global
subscriptions. Since the UK is a net exporter of research outputs, if we fund
our own then the cost to the UK must rise, albeit quite modestly.
To
apply the term ‘double dipping’ to this effect is a pejorative way of
describing the hybrid journals with which most publishers now experiment. The
APC element in these journals is still relatively low, less than 5%, but if the
Finch recommendations are adopted in other jurisdictions this proportion will
rise and over time the cost of subscriptions will fall.
Finch
recognised this effect, pointing to “the importance of publishers’ providing
clear information about the balance between the revenues provided in APCS and in
subscriptions.”
RP:
If pressed, OA advocates often concede that the additional costs they expect
will probably be transitional costs alone, and that over time OA publishing will
prove considerably cheaper than subscription publishing. Do you also expect OA
publishing to be less costly than subscription publishing? If you do, then what
do you believe the implications of that will be for publishers?
GT: Probably not. All publishing has costs, and
the sunk, fixed, and platform costs associated with an effective publishing
operation of a quality that the market expects will still be there, only the
marginal and variable costs will change and supply side funding will bring its
own costs as well.
The
CEPA report
for RIN
did not anticipate significant cost reductions from a transition to open
access. Whatever the benefits, I don’t see cost as the imperative. Publishers
must live within the funds available in the market, and we can live with an OA
market funded with APCs.
On Green and Gold
RP: What has also been controversial is Finch’s suggestion that institutional repositories are there simply to provide access to data and grey literature, and for preservation. OA advocates strongly disagree, and point out that repositories have provided almost all the UK’s OA literature to date.
Has
Finch misunderstood the role of repositories, or do you also view the proper role
of repositories being as Finch described it?
GT: I don’t recognise your use of “simply”, Finch
used “particularly”. Clearly repositories can fulfil a variety of functions for
the institutions that set them up, and Finch sees them as [playing] “a valuable
role complementary to formal publishing”.
For
a variety of reasons, practical, economic, technical, and sociological, I
cannot see how repositories can take over as the primary channel for scholarly
communication. Some advocates and evangelists disagree I know, but all I would
say is that they have so far failed to convince their own constituency of that,
and that all the evidence is that ‘Green’ is very slow to evolve. Isn’t it time
to find another way?
RP:
Speaking to The Bookseller in May you said, “Our
position is we are already committed to working with ‘gold’ funding and we
expect that to be a recommendation in the Finch group.” You added, “But we know
where our red line is. ‘Green’ funding, which is dependent on another funding
scheme, with a six-month embargo to publication, we cannot agree to, and we are
soon to publish some research into the impact of ‘green’ open access funding.”
Is
it merely the six month embargo that publishers object to, or do they reject
the very notion of Green OA?
GT: I was
speaking after David Willetts (the UK Science Minister) made a speech at the PA
AGM that can be read here. He anticipated some of the recommendations
that were to appear later in the Finch report, although none of us had seen a
final version at that stage.
As
I have already said, all publishing has costs, and these costs need to be
recovered. If APCs are not available, then publishers need another model, and
for the first 300 years in the life of journals that has been through
subscriptions. Surely it is reasonable that publishers are allowed a sufficient
time to recover their costs before a free version is posted to the internet?
The
so-called ‘Green’ route to OA is entirely derivative of publishing costs being
recovered elsewhere. We are very firmly of the belief that a minimum 12 month
embargo is needed, and in some subjects such as mathematics probably longer.
The ‘half lives’ of article downloads after publication make this very clear.
How
can Green operate at all if there is no viable means left to fund the original
publication and peer review?
We
are not opposed to Green, but we are opposed to the imposition of short
embargoes when the funder is not prepared to fund APCs.
On research and rants
RP: I assume the research you referred to when speaking to The Bookseller is the report you published with the ALPSP on June 1st. This suggested that the potential effect of making journals free after a six-month embargo was that libraries would cancel 65% of their Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences journals, and 44% of their Scientific, Technical and Medical journals.
However,
three days earlier, the PEER
end of project conference had reported that there is no evidence of any
harm to publishers as a result of embargoed green OA and indeed, it suggested,
there is evidence of increased total usage as a result of green OA.
Why
do you think these two studies come up with such different results, and which
one in your view is more believable?
GT: They are not
comparing like with like. Our short survey with ALPSP was an opinion piece. We
commissioned a researcher to ask a single simple question to a sample of around
1,000 research librarians, hypothesising a world where the majority of the
content of research journals was freely available within 6 months of
publication, and asking if they would continue to subscribe.
We
got around 200 responses and the results can be read here. We don’t claim
this to be definitive or statistically significant, we didn’t control for all
the variables, but the answers speak for themselves and it does paint a stark
picture of the hazards of Green as a single club solution.
PEER
however is a much more sophisticated four-year longitudinal observatory funded
by the EC into the impact of a network of repositories on user behaviour and on
the 300 journals that agreed to contribute content. The results can be read here.
PEER
was able to demonstrate that stakeholders holding divergent views at the
beginning of the project were able to collaborate effectively on a complex
project. It stands as a practical testament to the work involved in making a
network of green repositories function, including the need to set up a depot to
feed in the content contributed by publishers.
Authors
were invited to deposit their own content for 50% of the articles. The
publishers did it for them for the other 50%. The result was 170 articles
posted via the author route, and 11,800 by the publisher route. It is hard to
avoid the conclusion that researchers do not see it as their role to
self-archive.
The
access statistics also tell a story: 8% via PEER repositories, 92% via
publisher platforms. Perhaps readers prefer the version of record to the basic
text in the repository version. All parties seemed to emerge from PEER with a preference
for the funded, gold route, although that was not the objective of the exercise.
RP:
The day the Finch Report was released the Daily Mail published an article warning, that
“thousands of jobs could be placed at risk” if its recommendations were
implemented. The paper added, “One leading publishing group said the move to
provide all of Britain’s academic output online for nothing could destroy a
£1billion industry that employs 10,000 people here and in its overseas
operations.”
The
OA movement reacted angrily to the news story. Subsequently, the Publishers
Association, ALPSP, STM and Elsevier have all
denied having anything to do with its publication.
But
I wonder if you could say whether you agree with critics of the story that it
was biased and misinformed — A “misinformed rant”, as Cameron Neylon put it?
GT: Why pick on
this hilariously misinformed and one-eyed piece of journalism (“a report
commissioned by No 10 Downing Street sociologist Janet Finch”) among all the
other coverage of Finch?
I
was still on holiday at the time so it certainly wasn’t me, and everyone I know
has denied all knowledge.
Perhaps
someone close to the review group did not like the conclusions and wanted to work
a spoiler. Perhaps we should not believe all we read in the papers. I don’t think
it made a fig of difference other than to discredit the organ involved. We used
to wrap our chips in this kind of thing, now unfortunately it stays on the
record.
Why
not read what Janet Finch herself had to say in the Times, or this unusually
sober piece in the Guardian?
Rant?
I’ve seen a few of those elsewhere, and on the whole have learnt to enjoy them
for what they are, an opportunity for a more considered response.
On rationing
RP: Commenting to the Times Higher Education, one of the professors who sat on the Finch Committee — Adam Tickell — suggested that if the Report’s recommendations are implemented we can expect to see research funders rationing the number of papers published.
As
he put it, “Quite a large number of people publish a huge volume of papers. If
they were to reduce that, it may not make any significant difference to the
integrity of the science base.”
I
am thinking that perhaps research funders are reaching a similar conclusion.
When I spoke to David
Sweeney, HEFCE's director of research, innovation, and skills last year he said
that it was not obvious to HEFCE “that a constraint on the volume of material
published through the current scholarly system would be a bad thing and that is
why, in our research assessment system, we only look at up to four outputs per
academic.”
He
added, “The amount of research deserving publication ‘for the record’ is much
less than the amount deserving publication ‘for immediate debate within the
community’ and whereas print journals have met both needs in the past the
internet offers the prospect of decoupling the two, leading to a drop in the
amount of material requiring/meriting the full peer review and professional
editing service.”
Do
you think that if the Finch recommendations are implanted it will lead to a
rationing of the number of papers published? If so, what would be the
implications for publishers?
GT: Allocating funding to the supply (author) side
rather than the demand (reader) side will doubtless have some interesting and
as yet unobserved sociological consequences. The dynamic of funding flows will
change and with it the point of decision as to how those funds will be applied.
A
consequence could well be a rationing of publication funds, potentially leading
to a reduction in the quantity of papers submitted for publication in an
entirely open access world.
I
don’t think we will be in that world in the immediate future, but there would
be a certain irony in the logical end of open science being less science.
But
then all the drivers of scholarly communication will still be there:
registration of conclusions, dissemination of results, the imprimatur of peer
review, the need to archive, the prestige capital of being published. I don’t
foresee Stalinist interventions choking off scholarly discourse any time soon.
RP:
Thank you for your time.
3 comments:
PUBLISHER INTERESTS VERSUS RESEARCH INTERESTS
Mr. Taylor, who does not like the words "publisher lobby," represents publishers' interests.
The shocking thing about the Finch report (described as "balanced" by Dame Janet Finch) was that it so totally reflected publishers' interests (rather than the interests of research and researchers) that its recommendations are hardly distinguishable from the recommendations that representatives of the publishing industry have been urging on the research community for years now: If you want Open Access (OA), find the extra money to pay us for it, in a smooth transition to Gold OA that preserves our revenues. Green OA self-archiving is inadequate, parasitic on the value we have added to research, and would destroy publishing and peer review if it prevailed.
I have made an effort to explain how and why this reasoning is fallacious and against the interests of both research and OA her:
Why the UK Should Not Heed the Finch Report
"Surely it is reasonable that publishers are allowed a sufficient time to recover their costs before a free version is posted to the internet?"
This is a cart before the horse argument if ever there was one. Surely it is high time, fully 20 years after the invention of the web, its advantages be fully exploited?
How does excluding participation and delaying communication assist the scientific process?
That said, I think M. Taylor's observation that "researchers do not see it as their role to self-archive" in the context of the results of the PEER study are valid. The OA debate has made clear is that the purpose of scholarly publication is not merely to transmit knowledge, but also to attribute that knowledge's status. So the future must be golden, I'd suggest.
After that we are merely arguing about the price. The ArXiVists get by on US$7/article. PeerJ will publish you for a lifetime for a one-off fee of $99 (and the promise to do a little reviewing). Mr Taylor and his ilk (and I include PLoS among them) are starting to look like expensive parasites indeed.
We might accept their cost if some were not subtracting value by a) delaying the flow of knowledge and b) excluding the public from that knowledge.
That the traditional publishing houses represented by Mr Taylor even exist in 2012 is merely testimony to the vanity and collective stupidity of the academic community.
The debate on Open Access publishing sadly is always very restrictive. In my opinion, we can keep debating the issues of sustainable business model (from the publishers’ point of view) and that of profiteering (from scientists’ perspective) and still not be able to solve the problem until scientific community is prepared to talk openly about the drawbacks with the peer review processes, which is where most of the cost comes from, and which varies across the journals and disciplines in its form, rigour, and application.
Open Access is undeniably good and thank god everybody is agreed on it. But Green OA, in my opinion, by definition lays emphasis on journal articles as the means of dissemination of scientific knowledge and then seeks to make it cheaper. How can one, in this very market driven world, make a commodity important and cheap at the same time without significantly regulating it (and that will have its own problems in a globalised economy). A large number of traditional Subscription model journals are prepared to make their content Open Access if you pay them “sufficient” amount of money. They want to exploit their reputation and Impact Factors. Scientific community likes the reputation and Impact they offer and Universities adore it. How do we then get these journals to reduce the cost? In a “market”, it won’t be possible. Governments can do it by regulating it. But, then again, regulating in UK alone may just harm the UK economy and not improve things worldwide much at all.
If we are to stick to the current models of peer reviewing (and I don’t see that changing soon) and we want all our research Open Access, we then should talk about costs of publishing Open Access and that takes me to profiteering. Open Access publishing can be done in a very cheap way (and I am not just talking about post publication peer review platforms like arxiv and WebmedCentral, which are of course going to be very cheap, but also publication after peer review publishers, the current norm). The problem then is that of profits the companies make and their operational costs. Examples of profits that publishers make are well rehearsed and I will not repeat here but what is often forgotten is the operational costs. There are journals that are “not for profit” but still charge a lot of money because they have high operational costs. I think, in near future, you will have two types of Open Access Publishers. Less reputed ones (new publishers with low impact factors or none at all), who will publish for a very small fee and the reputed ones (which are probably currently subscription based and also high impact famous OA journals), who will charge higher sums for those scientists (and funders) who can afford to pay it for the additional prestige and impact factor it brings to their articles, research, and university. But, that’s fine. Isn’t it? You offer people (researchers) choice and they can decide where they want the publishing world to go or is it too simplistic and naïve?
Regards,
Kamal Mahawar
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