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. 2001 Oct;89(4):363-71.

Electronic journal access: how does it affect the print subscription price?

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Electronic journal access: how does it affect the print subscription price?

F L Chen et al. Bull Med Libr Assoc. 2001 Oct.

Abstract

Objective: This study examined the rates of print journal subscription price increases according to the type of available electronic access. The types of access included: electronic priced separately from the print, combination print with "free online" access, and aggregated, defined here as electronic access purchased as part of a collection. The percentages of print price increases were compared to each other and to that for titles available only in print. The authors were not aware of prior objective research in this area.

Methods: The authors analyzed the percentage print price increases of 300 journals over a five-year time period. The titles were grouped according to type of available electronic access. The median and mean percentage print price increases were calculated and plotted for all titles within each group.

Results: Using both the median and the mean to look at the percentage print price increases over five years, it was obvious that print prices for journals with electronic access exceeded journals that did not offer an electronic option. Electronic priced separately averaged 3% to 5% higher than print only titles using both measures. Combination print with "free online" access had higher increases from 1996 to 1999, but, in 2000, their percentage increases were about the same as print only titles. The rate of price increases for aggregated titles consistently went down over the past five years. Journals with no electronic option showed the lowest percentage rates of print price increase.

Conclusions: The authors' findings reveal that the increases of print prices for their sample of titles were higher if a type of electronic access was offered. According to the results of this study, aggregated collections currently represent the electronic option whose percentage price increase for print prices was lowest. However, the uneven fluctuations in rates of subscription prices revealed that the pricing of journals with electronic access is still evolving. More study is recommended to see if the trends observed in this study are sustained over a longer time period.

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Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Number of titles by type of electronic access (N = 300 titles). P = print only; E = electronic priced separately; C = combination price; A = aggregated pricing.
Figure 2
Figure 2
Percentage median price increase
Figure 3
Figure 3
Percentage mean price increase 1995 to 2000
Figure 4
Figure 4
Adjustment graph (print increase = 0)

References

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