How can colleges and university textbook publisher’s and textbook stores gouge college students so much?
Favorite Answer
The other problem is lack of competition. Due to the problem mentioned above, there has been enormous consolidation of publishers over the past decade or so. When I first started teaching, books were a whole lot cheaper, and I had my choice, particularly for basic courses, of 10 or 15 different textbooks from different publishers. Now I’m lucky to have 3 for the same course. It makes it very difficult for the instructor to find a good book, and means that in many cases, a particular publisher has a near monopoly on the market, so that they can charge whatever they want to charge for the book.
You can find ways to cut 10 or 20% off the costs of the books by buying them on line, etc., but for the most part, the authors are not making a lot of money on these books, and the profit margins for textbooks are in the same range as everything else in the publishing industry.
An education is an investment for a lifetime. The books represent only a small fraction of the total costs. If you go to a public college, then most of the costs are being borne by the taxpayers, so the books might be 40% of your total expenses, but a good education is really expensive, as it should be -the people providing it should be rewarded.
So many people are making money off the sale. First you have the team that do the research for the text (they split up their share of the profit) and they put in so much time for research they do it for the money. Next you have the publisher, book binder etc that make their cut. Then the distributor makes his cut and so does the University bookstore. The University bookstore buys back textbooks cheap so they can make another profit reselling books. But so many professors now chance their textbooks to the latest editions that it is harder and harder for students or bookstores to get money back or make a profit. The latest editions have changes and sometimes they are only minor undates but it causes the student to buy the new book when the professor requires it. That is a racket to keep them selling books. And where to all these old textbooks go? Yard sales, used bookstores, peoples garages. You can not hardly give them away, no one wants them. So they go into the landfill, what a waste.
We need to make a law that these textbooks must be used in the classrooms for at least 3 years by the Universities. That will at least help curb the racket. Every year is way too often and a waste.
I know I am tired of buying these books. I have one son still in college (5 yrs now) and I do nothing but buy him books that he can not later sell. One book can cost $300. It all adds up and I think these companies need more competition. Maybe our professiors should require the book be online. Then the prices will drop for hard cover books while the techy companies jump in to make a buck. We certainly need to do something.
But if you want, try searching online for the international editions. They are often paperback and printed on low-quality paper – and they are much cheaper.
Take care and i hope you find a good answer
-Mike
- Academic Writing
- Accounting
- Anthropology
- Article
- Blog
- Business
- Career
- Case Study
- Critical Thinking
- Culture
- Dissertation
- Education
- Education Questions
- Essay Tips
- Essay Writing
- Finance
- Free Essay Samples
- Free Essay Templates
- Free Essay Topics
- Health
- History
- Human Resources
- Law
- Literature
- Management
- Marketing
- Nursing
- other
- Politics
- Problem Solving
- Psychology
- Report
- Research Paper
- Review Writing
- Social Issues
- Speech Writing
- Term Paper
- Thesis Writing
- Writing Styles