« Virtual Painter: Soyuz Cosmonettes | Main | Virtual Painter: German Graves In Normandy »

04/10/2008

Why Do Textbooks Cost So Much?

From Charlotte Allen:

Welcome to the world of textbook pricing, where, it would seem, the usual market forces don't apply. The textbook market in no way resembles the trade book market, in which the same person - the consumer - desires the book (the new War and Peace, the latest diet guide or whatever), acquires it, and pays for it, so that price points and competition are crucial. What the textbook market resembles most is the market for health care, in which one entity (the physician/the professor) desires - that is, assigns or prescribes - the product, a second entity (the patient/the student) consumes it, and a third set of entities (insurance companies/parents) foot the bill. Spiraling prices for textbooks, like spiraling medical costs, seem to be the inevitable result. A General Accounting Office report in 2005 noted that textbook prices rose 186 percent in the U.S. from 1986 to 2004, compared to only a 3 percent rise in other prices over the same period and a 7 percent rise in average college tuition and fees. The seemingly out-of-control price increases have prompted laws in six states and pending bills in at least four others - plus a measure passed by the House of Representatives on Feb. 7 - that aim to regulate the way in which textbooks are marketed so as to lower costs to students.

Comments

Many times the same textbook can be had for about half the cost if purchased in another country. You might lose the glossy color photos and it might be softcover, but it's the same book. They are often repatriated and sold here.

Post a comment

If you have a TypeKey or TypePad account, please Sign In