Home page for digital-law-online.info - Table of Contents - Introduction to the online version Chapter 1 – The Commission and Its Recommendations Chapter 2 – The Establishment, Mandate, and Activities of the Commission Chapter 3 – Computers and Copyright Chapter 4 – Machine Reproduction – Photocopying - Recommendations of the Commission - Recommendation for Amending One Area of the 1976 Copyright Act - Recommendations Concerning the Five-Year Review of Photocopying Practices - Recommendations to Publishers - Recommendations to Government Agencies - Provisions of the 1976 Copyright Act Affecting Photocopying - CONTU Guidelines on Photocopying under Interlibrary Loan Arrangements - Volume of Library Photocopying in 1976 - Interrelated Economics of Publishing and Libraries and the Impact of Copying Fees - Legislation and Systems Relating to Photocopying in Other Countries - Recommendations of Interested Organizations - Effects of Future Technological Change Appendix A – Summary of the Legislative History of Computer-Related Issues and the Photocopy Issue Appendix B – Public Law 93-573 and Public Law 95-146 Appendix E – Lists of Witnesses Appendix F – Alphabetical Listing of Persons Appearing before the Commission Appendix G – Transcripts of Commission Meetings Appendix H – Summaries of Commission-Sponsored Studies Appendix J – Selected Provisions of the Copyright Act of 1976 and Copyright Office Regulations |
Final Report of the National Commission on New Technology Uses of Copyrighted Works Chapter 4 – Machine Reproduction – Photocopying Interrelated Economics of Publishing and Libraries and the Impact of Copying FeesMany assertions were made concerning the economic impact of photocopying on journal publishing during the debates in the twenty-year effort of Congress to revise the copyright law, but little statistical or other factual evidence to substantiate these assertions was presented, either by librarians or by publishers and authors. Librarians took the position that copying did not and would not significantly reduce the volume of sales of printed publications, and that librarians strive to purchase little-used materials rather than subject their patrons to the inconvenience and delay of interlibrary loan. In part, publisher and author concerns were not so {Page 66} much for the present as for the future, at which time they believed various means of photocopying might become increasingly cheaper relative to the cost of acquiring printed publications. They also believed that they should secure some revenue from copying as a contribution to the “first-copy” costs of publications, such as editorial, typesetting, and business overhead. General Relationship of Journal Publishing to Library BudgetsThe most complete study on library and journal publishing economics and their relationship to one another is the 1975 Fry/White study, sponsored by the National Science Foundation, covering the years 1969, 1971, and 1973.243 Pertinent data were obtained through questionnaires filled out by a sample of U.S. scholarly and research journals and by a sample of academic, public, and special libraries.244 The periodicals included in the survey were approximately 2,500 U.S. scholarly journals, of which about 150 furnished extensive usable data. The study provides data separately for four categories of journals by publisher: commercial publishers, professional societies, university presses, and other nonprofit publishers. Library Acquisition Budgets – 1969-73During the period 1969-73 when prices rose sharply for both periodicals and books, expenditures for periodicals and the number of subscriptions increased in all three types of libraries included in the Fry/White study. Although the total dollar expenditure for books also increased somewhat, the number of books purchased decreased. These trends were more sharply accentuated in academic libraries-the largest purchasers of periodicals - than in public and special libraries. The median percentage increases in acquisition expenditures for periodicals and books from 1969 to 1973 in large libraries of all three types are displayed in Table 8.
Table 8 – Percent of Increase in Acquisition Expenditures, 1969-73
By 1973, large academic libraries, which had allotted 67 percent of their acquisition budgets to books and 33 percent to periodicals in 1969, were allotting 54 percent of the acquisition budgets to books and 46 percent to periodicals. The overall percentage increases in the number of periodical subscriptions by large libraries during the same 1969-73 period were: academic libraries, 18 percent; public libraries, 22 percent; and special libraries, 6 percent. Borrowing and Photocopying through Interlibrary LoanAll types and sizes of libraries increased their borrowing of periodicals through interlibrary loan during the 1969-73 period. The median number of interlibrary loans and the percentage increases for large academic libraries, medium-sized public libraries, and large special libraries is delineated in Table 9. {Page 67}
Table 9 – Median Number of Interlibrary Borrowings for Libraries
Effect of Photocopying on Periodical SubscriptionsDespite the frequent debate concerning whether library photocopying from journals substitutes for subscriptions, little information has been available to resolve it. The responses that Fry and White received when they asked librarians whether photocopying had this effect on subscriptions are displayed in Table 10.
Table 10 – Effects of Photocopying on Periodical Subscriptions (Calculated by Percentage Points)
While most libraries reported their purchases of journals were unaffected by photocopying practices, a substantial minority said otherwise. Although many libraries reported increasing subscriptions, the net effect on subscriptions seemed clearly negative in this study. Evidence from another study, however, indicates that in the state of Minnesota the total number of periodical subscriptions by fifty-three academic libraries in the MINITEX system increased by about 25 percent from 1970/71 to 1976/77 following the establishment of this statewide inter-library loan network in 1971.245 Scholarly Journal Subscriptions and Library BudgetsThe Fry/White study also analyzed the economics of U.S. scholarly journal publishing and the significance of the library market for such journals. Libraries constitute the largest market for scholarly journals. These journals are also the type of periodical most copied in or by libraries in relation to the size of circulations. The universe of 2,459 U.S. scholarly journals surveyed by Fry and White was broken down as shown in Table 11.
Table 11 – Breakdown of Number of U.S. Scholarly Journals by Type of Publisher
The journals responding to the questionnaire reported that the number of copies circulated increased in the period 1969-73, but generally this was the result of increases in the number of foreign and institutional subscribers and decreases in the number of individual subscribers. Table 12 presents data by type of publisher. The figures in Table 12 are consistent with the general trend in the Fry/White survey data which showed an increase in periodical subscription {Page 68} by libraries from 1969 to 1973.246 These journal subscription data do not Correspond exactly with the library data because, among other reasons, U.S. libraries subscribe to foreign journals and serial materials other than scholarly journals.
Table 12 – Percentage Changes in Circulation by Type of Publisher
The data also show that U.S. institutions-principally libraries-account for about one-third of the circulation of scholarly journals published by commercial presses, university presses, and other nonprofit periodicals, and for over 20 percent of the circulation of journals of professional societies which provide subscriptions to their own members as part of general membership fees. The complete data on the proportion of subscriptions by type of subscriber are shown in Table 13.
Table 13 – Percent of Circulation Distribution by Type of Publisher, 1973
The publisher data displayed in Table 14 indicate that, in general, the number of journals that had differential (usually higher) subscription rates for institutions and libraries increased markedly from 1969 to 1973.
Table 14 – Percent of Journals Having Institutional and Library Subscription Rates, 1969-73
Table 15 shows that, in general, the institutional (usually library) subscription rates, when they exist, increased substantially more than the individual subscription rates in the period 1969-73.
Table 15 – Increases In Individual and Institutional Subscription Rates Median Subscription Rates
Taking all of the data from Table 15 into consideration, it is clear that libraries and other institutions provided an increased share of the revenues of scholarly journal publishers in 1973 as compared with 1969. Institutions were buying a larger number of subscriptions as well as an increased proportion of all subscriptions. In many cases, they were also paying institutional subscription prices which increased more than the subscription price for individuals. Unfortunately, direct data on the proportion of total revenues derived by scholarly journal publishers from institution and library subscriptions are not provided in the Fry/White study. However, for many individual journals (except for society journals with high proportions of individual subscriptions) as well as for classes of journals, one-half or more of total subscription revenues must have come from U.S. libraries or other institutions. If foreign sales are added (and these are predominantly to institutions), this proportion is still higher. {Page 69} The Fry/White study also collected data on the profitability of U.S. scholarly journal publishing. Statistically, this is the weakest part of the study, because only ninety-two journals provided financial data. The data are summarized in Table 16.
Table 16 – Operating Income As A Percentage Of Total Revenue
Operating income is defined in Table 16 as “all revenue minus costs of sales and operating expenses. It does not take into account such items as interest paid or received, capitalized expenditures, or taxes.” Thus, for commercial publishers in 1973, the net profit after corporate income and other taxes would be about 6 percent of total revenue. The society, university press, and other nonprofit publishers would not, of course, be subject to federal and state corporate income taxes. Although libraries in the 1969-73 period were subscribing to more scholarly journals and paying higher prices for subscriptions, especially when they had to pay institutional subscription rates, the net effect was not a windfall for the publishers of scholarly journals. Fry and White concluded that the price-budget imbalance did not result from excessive returns to publishers. Commercial publishers had profits no better than average, and societies had barely enough capital to launch new journals. They described the condition of university press journal publishing as disastrous. Estimates of Possible Additional Costs to Libraries for Copying FeesUsing the estimates made from the King Research data in this report247 on the number of photocopied items from serials that would require authorization, and assuming a certain average level of photocopying fees, it is possible to arrive at estimates of additional annual costs to libraries resulting from copying fees under the new copyright act. These estimates are valid only if libraries do not change their copying practices as a result of the 1976 Act. It is likely, however, that libraries may alter their practices. The analysis uses the three categories of copying in the King study (interlibrary loan, local use, and intrasystem use) and breaks down the copying by type of library. These amounts are then compared with the available data on total annual library expenditures for library materials to arrive at some estimate of the comparative magnitudes of these new costs as compared with the existing acquisition costs for library materials. In the absence of comprehensive statistical data at this time, an average copying fee to publishers per article of $1.25 will be assumed. This is higher than the {Page 70} $.60 paid by the Institute for Scientific Information (ISI) and the $.50 paid by National Technical Information Service (NTIS) under direct contracts with publishers. It may, however, be less than the weighted average price which will be paid to the Copyright Clearance Center. The 1977 Fry/White/Johnson study on journal publishing indicated that some 53 percent of the journals responding to a question relating to appropriate fees to be paid by agents or clearinghouses for copying articles set $1.00 or less as an appropriate fee.248 Copying for Interlibrary LoanTable 3 and the discussion following presented estimates of the volume of copying of periodicals for interlibrary loan for items not more than five years old that would not be exempt either under the CONTU guidelines, the exceptions in section 108 for replacement of copies, or section 107 for classroom use. Table 17 shows, at an average of $1.25, the additional annual costs to libraries.
Table 17 – Additional Annual Costs for Copying for Interlibrary Loan ($1.25 average copying fee)
The estimates in Table 17 may in some respects overstate the additional costs because they do not consider the following: (1) libraries reaching their limit of five copies for a title might subscribe to the journal,249 or tell patrons that their requests could not be met, or that they charge an additional fee for copying; (2) many journals may adopt more liberal copying policies than is required by law; and (3) authorized royalty-paid copies might cost the borrowing library the same as or less than conventional interlibrary loans. Data compiled from a special survey of interlibrary loan charges by members of the Association of Research Libraries in 1976 showed that the libraries in this group that charged for photocopies had a weighted average price of $3.50 for a ten-page article – excluding those cases in which special lower rates were charged to libraries in the same state (or consortium), or in which interlibrary loans were subsidized by the state. If this $3.50 figure is taken as a base and there is added to it an internal borrowing cost of $6.00, the total average cost to the borrowing library becomes $9.50. The $6.00 fee is selected as an internal borrowing cost; this is somewhat less than the average of the internal borrowing costs in 1977 in the three libraries for which such costs were calculated in the Palmour study contracted for by the Commission.250 {Page 71} These combined costs compare with an out-of-pocket direct cost to a borrowing library of securing a ten-page article from ISI of $3.50 (higher with special services), the $4.00 - $6.00 cost of securing a single copy from University Microfilms, and the price of a copy through NTIS, which will vary somewhat, but may average $7.00. These comparisons do not take into account the internal costs to the lending library, over and above the fees charged. Copying for Local UseTable 4 presented estimates of the number of copies for local use by type of library requiring authorization. Applying the same assumed $1.25 average copying fee, Table 18 shows the additional annual costs for various types of libraries.
Table 18 – Additional Annual Costs for Copying for Local Use ($1.25 average copying fee)
As in the case of copying for interlibrary loan, the figures in Table 18 may in some respects be an overstatement of additional costs for some (but not all) of the reasons mentioned for interlibrary loan copying: (1) patrons might be informed that copies could not be made, or that they would have to pay an additional copying fee; (2) many journals may adopt more liberal copying policies than are required by law; and (3) many older issues of journals will be out of copyright because they were not renewed for a second term. On the other hand, the estimate for academic libraries may be low, because the King data on classroom use included all copying for classroom use, not copying for classroom use permissible under the educational copying guidelines. Copying for Intrasystem UseTable 5 presented estimates by types of library of the number of copies made for intrasystem use that would require authorization. Applying the same average $1.25 copying fee, Table 19 shows the additional annual costs for various types of libraries. These figures may be an overstatement of additional costs for the same reasons given in the discussion of copying for local use.
Table 19 – Additional Annual Costs for Copying for Intrasystem Use ($1.25 average copying fee)
Estimates of Total Additional Costs for LibrariesBased upon the above discussion and calculations, the estimated costs for various types of libraries may be aggregated as shown in Table 20. Data from the National Center for Education Statistics (NCES) on the total expenditures of three types of libraries for library materials are also included.
Table 20 – Possible Annual Additional Costs to Libraries in Copying Fees for Periodicals as Compared with Expenditures for Library Materials
There are no reliable data on expenditures for materials by special libraries. Recently, NCES has contracted with the Special Libraries Association for a preliminary study of special libraries in commerce and industry, including the expenditures for materials. The results of this study may be available before the end of 1978. {Page 72} Table 20 has some unexpected aspects. The net estimated increased costs for academic libraries constitute an insignificant percentage of the current expenditures of these libraries for materials. The estimated copying fees of almost 3 percent of public library material expenditures constitute a very much higher percentage of materials expenditures than for academic libraries, but the dollar amounts are not large. The special library estimates may reflect the amount of multiple copying done in many of these libraries for their research, professional, and executive personnel. The federal agency library estimates are not particularly surprising, given the nature of most of their operations, which are more similar to special libraries than to either of the other two types of libraries. If these estimates of copying fees are approximately correct, the impact of photocopying on academic libraries as a class would be minimal and should not present any significant budget problems. Copying fees, which would go mostly to journal publishers, would not be great enough to do more than accentuate very slightly the trend in academic libraries of spending more of their acquisition funds on serials and less on books. For public libraries, the effect of photocopying would be proportionately much greater, with copying fees amounting to almost 3 percent of total acquisition budgets in 1974. Since the bulk of the copying fees would be paid to periodical publishers, in the case of public libraries this might modestly accentuate existing trends of shifting funds from book to periodical purchases. For special libraries, at least two different situations exist: one for libraries in business and industrial establishments or such related organizations as trade associations, and the other for special libraries in nonprofit organizations. In the first category, information is used to increase the revenues or to reduce the costs of the business. Copying fees would also be a tax-deductible cost of doing business. As compared to all other costs of doing business, copying fees would be small. Special libraries in nonprofit organizations are extremely varied, and it is difficult to state generally the impact of copying fees on their operations, especially since no statistical data exist on either their costs of operations as a class or their expenditures for periodicals, books, and other materials. The federal library situation is somewhat similar to that of libraries in business and industrial establishments. Information is used in carrying out the work of federal agencies. Copying fees would represent another operating cost and should not, in general, be of such a magnitude compared to other operating costs as to present unmanageable budget problems. Potential Copying Fees Compared with Publishers’ Revenues - PeriodicalsData on the total revenues from periodical publishing are collected approximately every five years by the Bureau of the Census in the Census of Manufactures and are estimated each year based on a sample survey in the Annual Survey of Manufactures. Unfortunately, the Bureau of the Census divides periodicals into only four classes: farm periodicals, specialized professional and business periodicals, general periodicals, and other periodicals (excluding shopping {Page 73} news, directories, and catalogs). Specialized professional and business periodicals, with estimated total 1976 revenues of $407 million from subscriptions and $946 million from advertisements, are those most likely to be photocopied.251 It is clear that this broad category of periodicals is very different from the 2,459scholarly periodicals surveyed in the 1975 Fry/White study, the 1973 total annual revenues which were estimated at $170 million, of which less than 10 percent was from advertising. If we compare total annual copying fees for periodicals, estimated to be about $10 million, with the total 1973 revenues of the scholarly journals surveyed by Fry and White, revenues from copying fees appear to be a minor but still significant source of revenue for some of these journals. While not comparable with revenues from subscription charges, income from authorized photocopying could be, in some cases, more significant than such current sources of revenue as advertising, page charges, or a variety of subsidies.252 The Economics of Book Publishing, the Library Market for Books, and PhotocopyingLibraries account for a very much smaller proportion of the total sales of U.S. books than they do of sales of scientific, technical, and scholarly journals, and the kinds of books which are photocopied in libraries fall into a few limited classes. The most copied classes of books and the industry estimates of total dollar receipts in 1977 of U.S. publishers (including exports) for these classes were as follows:253 Technical and scientific $266.8 million Business and other professional 195.2 million Medical 97.0 million University press 53.5 million The library and institutional market is particularly important to university press books, constituting well over one-half of university press sales within the United States.254 The King study clearly indicates that in 1976 the volume of photocopying from copyrighted books in libraries was considerably less than the volume of copying from copyrighted serials. The respective proportions were: 70 percent of the items copied in libraries were from serials, 24 percent from books, and 6 percent from other copyrighted materials. These data are consistent with data from other studies and also are consistent with the general practice of libraries, which is to lend the physical book to their patrons for local use and also for interlibrary loans and intrasystem loans rather than to make photocopies. The bulk of the copying from books in libraries has probably occurred in two ways: (1) the library patron may make a copy of some part of a book on a coin-operated machine; and (2) library employees or others in educational institutions may make copies to place chapters or other portions of books on reserve for the use of students, or the instructor may have copies of portions of books made for classroom use. Because of the ambiguity of the 1909 Act, there also had been a certain amount of copying to create anthologies or substitute textbooks by putting together photocopies of chapters of books and periodical articles for use in specific courses. Congress dealt with copying for educational use by including in the House Report the educational copying guidelines.255 These guidelines place definite limitations on the amount and character of copying for teachers and for classroom use that may be regarded as fair use under section 107. It is unlikely that the educational copying permissible within these guidelines will {Page 74} have much adverse effect on the economic viability of book publishing. The amount of copying from books that is permissible under the 1976 Act, either as fair use under section 107 and the educational copying guidelines or under the exemptions in section 108 for library copying, would seem to have no appreciable effect on the economics of book publishing at this time or in the next few years. There will undoubtedly be some copying of books in violation of the 1976 Act that will substitute for the purchase of books. The amount of such copying is probably small, however, and is inhibited by cost factors, in particular, the current frequently higher per-page cost of making copies as compared with the cost of buying the book. Furthermore, there are whole categories of books for which photocopies are not acceptable substitutes for the original product, such as paperback, book club, and art books. The book publishing industry, although not highly profitable as compared with some other industries, has been fairly stable during the past few years. There has been a growing dollar volume of sales, much of which is a reflection of inflation and higher prices, with little or no increase in the number of copies of books sold. There is no question, however, that a problem exists with respect to the production and sale of scholarly books, most of which are now published in the United States by university presses. This problem is primarily due to inflation, limitations on the amount of support that universities are prepared to give their presses, and library budgets which have not kept pace with rising prices of periodicals and books. As discussed earlier, the data in the 1976 Fry/White report show the decline of the physical volume of book purchases by libraries because of the shift of acquisition funds from books to periodicals. For the next few years, at least, it does not appear that the photocopying of books under the conditions imposed by the 1976 Act will have any significant impact on any branch of book publishing. Economic Analyses of the Impact of Photocopying ChargesThe Commission sought the assistance of several economists in assessing the likely consequences of imposing and collecting fees for photocopying copyrighted works, primarily periodical articles. Professors Fritz Machlup and William Baumol, each affiliated with Princeton and New York Universities, presented testimony, and Dr. Allen Ferguson, president of the Public Interest Economics Center in Washington, D.C., prepared a study for the Commission entitled An Analysis of Computer and Photo-copying Copyright Issues from the Point of View of the General Public and the Ultimate Consumer.256 Professor Machlup suggested that the imposition of copying fees would be economically sound only if the burden of paying the fees fell on the actual users and the collection of fees provided additional revenues that would hold down subscription prices or assist journals to survive. He expressed skepticism whether any of these effects, given the volume of photocopying for which payments would be made at this time and administrative costs, would be realized by collections of fees for photocopying.257 Professor Baumol viewed copying fees as economically beneficial if they served to spread the costs of publication, including a reasonable return on capital, over a broader base of actual users of copyrighted works. He questioned, however, whether publishers’ revenues for photocopying would significantly exceed the cost of collecting the fees. Unless fees provided additional net revenues, their imposition would not have a desirable economic effect.258 In his study, Dr. Ferguson concluded that the imposition of copying fees would not serve the interests of the general public.259 Such fees might inhibit user access to valuable information, he suggested, and would not necessarily hold down subscription rates significantly. He suggested that the Commission recommend broad exemptions from copyright liability for photocopying done by individuals and tax-exempt, nonprofit corporations. Copying done for resale by the copier, however, should not be exempted. He also suggested that publishers could practice price discrimination among different classes of subscribers to reflect such factors as photocopying as a means of increasing revenues. Periodical publishers may and often {Page 75} do charge libraries higher subscription prices than they charge individuals, but higher institutional subscription charges have not carried with them authorization to copy.260 The possibility, suggested by Dr. Ferguson, that photocopying privileges could be attached to higher prices charged to institutional subscribers, is one of three ways in which publishers could use the subscription price mechanism to authorize reproduction and to increase revenues. Other methods include an optional surcharge on the subscription price for blanket internal copying and the provision of lower multiple subscription rates. Although neither of the first two methods is in general use, two major newsletter publishers, the Bureau of National Affairs and Knowledge Industries Publications, offer lower multiple subscription rates. Furthermore, the optional subscription surcharge is the chief method used by the photocopying royalty collection agency in the Federal Republic of Germany. These considerations prompt an analysis of the relative merits of photocopying fees based on actual transactions and surcharges on subscription prices permitting photocopying. A transaction-based system, such as that of the Copyright Clearance Center, Inc. (CCC), offers the greatest exactitude in payments from users to publishers and authors. In such a system the payment falls directly on users and is proportional to the amount of reproduction. At the same time, it imposes greater administrative burdens and higher collection costs. Authorization through subscription pricing has the opposite characteristics: the payments are less proportional to the amount of copying but the administrative burdens and costs of the system are very low. Hence, it is easily understood why, out of eight possibilities, authorization to make copies via subscription pricing was the single most popular alternative among the libraries surveyed in the King study. From the publishers’ point of view, subscription revenues offer the advantage of providing revenues before publication, whereas copying fees provided delayed payments with a discounted present value.261 It is important to realize that these two systems are complementary rather than exclusive. A library with significant photocopying activity might wish to acquire authorization for copying for local and intrasystem uses through higher subscription prices in some cases and to use such clearance systems as CCC in others. In some instances, the subscription price alternative may work to the mutual advantage of both the publisher and the subscriber. These considerations of complementary and mutual advantage call for further examination and exploration of flexible subscription pricing with photocopying privileges as an alternative to transaction-based systems of licensing photocopying of material which the copiers have in their possession. Next section: Legislation and Systems Relating to Photocopying in Other Countries 243 Fry/White study, supra note 208. A further study by Fry and White, repeating the library portions of the 1976 study and covering the years 1974 - 76, has been delivered to the National Science Foundation and will be made available through National Technical Information Service. IMPACT OF ECONOMIC PRESSURES ON AMERICAN LIBRARIES AND THEIR DECISIONS CONCERNING SCHOLARLY AND RESEARCH JOURNAL ACQUISITION AND RETENTION (NSF Grant Number DSI 76-23592). The second study shows a continuation of the 1969-73 trends in library budgets and practices but at slower rates. In the 1974-76 period, funds were still being shifted from books to periodical purchases and the total number of periodical subscriptions was still rising. 244 Federal, state, and local government libraries were not surveyed in the Fry/White study. except for those that may have been included in the sample of special libraries. Elementary and secondary school libraries, both public and private, were not covered. 245 A 1977 British study, conducted by Aslib with the cooperation of the British Library and the Scientific, Technical, and Medical group of the International Publishers Association, indicated little impact on periodical subscriptions in British libraries due to the availability of a quick and inexpensive source of photocopies from the British Library Lending Division (BLLD). Since Britain’s interlibrary photocopy service is superior to that in the United States, one would expect a greater depressing effect on circulation levels there. However, only 15 percent of the British academic, public, and special libraries surveyed indicated that an effective interlibrary loan service enabled them “to reduce subscriptions by a significant amount without damaging the service.” The British study also concluded that only about 3 percent of the photocopies secured from other libraries (or borrowing the periodical volume and photocopying the article on receipt) constituted “replacement borrowing,” which is defined as securing photocopies of current materials from BLLD from periodicals which were once - but are no longer - subscribed to by the borrowing library. The author of this British study concludes that “the total number of subscriptions entered by all libraries is beginning to decline in 19761977,” but he attributes this to causes other than photocopying, such as the stringency in library budgets and the inflation of periodical and other library materials prices. The more general conclusion of the Aslib study was that no evidence was presented that “a direct causal relationship exists whereby increased interlibrary lending leads to an overall decrease in periodical subscriptions by virtue of its associated photocopying” (WOODWARD, FACTORS AFFECTING THE RENEWAL OF PERIODICAL SUBSCRIPTIONS: A STUDY OF DECISION-MAKING IN LIBRARIES WITH SPECIAL REFERENCE TO ECONOMICS AND INTER-LIBRARY LENDING [London: Aslib R & D Department, November 1977]). 246 Fry and White are skeptical about the figures for other nonprofit publishers and indicate that these reported results do not agree with other data supplied for journals published by this category of publisher. 247 See this chapter under Volume of Library Photocopying in 1976. 248 Fry/White/Johnson study, supra note 196, p.112. 249 The Palmour study (supra note 195) shows that as the number of photocopies of articles from a single title secured from other libraries increases above five, in many cases it will be less costly for a library to subscribe rather than to continue to secure photocopies through interlibrary loan. 250 Ibid. 251 U.S., BUREAU OF THE CENSUS, ANNUAL SURVEY OF MANUFACTURERS 1976: VALUE OF PRODUCT SHIPMENTS 12 (1977). 252 Some comment is required here as to the impact of copying fees on individual journals. The journals most copied by the British Lending Library Division (BLLD) in Boston Spa have, in general but not uniformly, been journals with larger circulations. The King study tabulations of the MINITEX data do not seem to reflect the same correlation between the volume of copying and circulation size. It is probably fair to say that the amount of copying from journals will vary greatly from one journal to another and that the importance of copying fees relative to other revenues will also vary greatly. In economic terms, this would be a good result: the revenue of journals would be related not only to their subscriptions but also to the extent that they are copied, reflecting in each case the market value placed on journals by subscribers and other users. 253 ASSOCIATION OF AMERICAN PUBLISHERS, 1977 INDUSTRY STATISTICS (Washington, D.C., 1977). 254 Ibid. 255 House Report, supra note 1, p.68. 256 Transcript, CONTU Meeting No. 15, p.164. 257 Ibid., p.9. 258 Ibid., p.52. 259 Ibid., p. 167. 260 The 1976 Fry/White study showed that in 1973, 1,754 out of the 2,459 journals in their universe of scholarly journals were practicing price discrimination between institutional and individual sub-scribers. By categories the percentages of journals practicing such price discrimination were: commercially published journals, 52.2; society published journals, 82.9; university press journals, 9.7; journals published by other nonprofit organizations, 38.4. 261 Under the 1976 Copyright Act both the transaction-based and subscription surcharge systems will require authors to transfer photocopying rights to the publisher. Section 201(c) of the act provides that unless otherwise specified by contract, authors retain the rights to their individual contributions to a collective work and the publisher merely has a copyright in that collective work. In a transaction-based system, such as the CCC, authors may contract with the publisher to pay them a portion of the revenues derived from the photocopying rights to their individual contribution to collective works, which may be identified. In a subscription surcharge system, however, it would be impossible to determine what part of the photocopying revenues were due to individual authors because there would be no record of the amount of photocopying of specific contributions. |