From: Richard Poynder <[log in to unmask]>
Date: Thu, 29 Mar 2018 12:53:33 +0100

On a superficial reading open access is intended to do no more than what it
says on the can: provide an internet-based scholarly communication system
in which research is made available *sans *paywall – in other words, a
system offering improved *accessibili*ty over the traditional subscription
system.



On a deeper reading, however, we learn that the OA movement was a response
to the unsustainably high costs of the subscription system and that it was
based on a conviction that open access would be a more cost-effective way
of sharing research – in other words, a system offering improved
*affordability*.



In addition, it was argued, open access would be a more transparent way of
doing things than the subscription-based system.



Essentially, the argument went like this: If researchers paid an
article-processing charge (APC) every time they wanted to publish a paper
(rather than librarians paying the costs of publishing by purchasing
subscriptions to large bundles of journals courtesy of the so-called Big
Deal), then not only could research papers be made freely available to all,
but authors would be able to make price-based decisions when choosing where
to publish.



This price *transparency*, argued OA advocates, would introduce market
forces into scholarly publishing that are absent in the subscription
system. It would also allow new open access publishers to enter the market
with lower-priced products, which would help drive down prices.



In short, OA advocates promised that open access would not only provide
greater *accessibilit*y but a more cost-effective scholarly communication
system, thereby solving the *affordability* problem that has long dogged
scholarly publishing. And to achieve this, they said, *transparency* is key.



Today we see the emergence of the OA Big Deal. Why has it emerged? What is
it? What might be the implications were to become the norm?



More here:  https://poynder.blogspot.co.uk/2018/03/the-
open-access-big-deal-back-to-future.html