A broken market drives up prices
Three companies — Pearson, Cengage, and McGraw-Hill — control 80 percent of the college textbook market. These publishers have historically driven up prices by issuing new editions with limited changes and taking advantage of a captive market of students who cannot choose an alternative to the assigned textbook. The result is clear: the rapidly increasing cost of textbooks has students now spending over $3 billion of financial aid dollars each year on course materials.
In the internet age, students have found new ways to work around high textbook costs. The past decade has seen the creation of a thriving online marketplace that facilitates trading, renting and selling of books. And a growing movement of openly licensed textbooks that are free or can be printed at low cost are creating real competition for traditional publishers — and saving students hundreds of millions.
Requiring students to purchase access codes to a proprietary publisher platform to submit homework or other course materials is crucial for publishers to stay relevant in this shifting marketplace. These codes lock students into high cost textbooks without significantly increasing educational value. Instead, students continue to struggle to afford critical educational material and often lose access to the materials at a later date. This is a continuation of the broken textbook market, not a radical solution. Rather than making changes that are more consumer-friendly, access codes are a last-ditch attempt from the publishing industry to maintain — and even strengthen — their monopoly
To increase use of access codes, publishers have sought out partnerships with institutions to steer faculty into these products and automatically bill students for these materials. Variously known as inclusive access, innovative pricing, or other names specific to the publisher, contracts between publishers and institutions set in place the conditions and discounts under which students are automatically charged on their tuition bill via an opt-out fee for each assigned class material.
Under federal law, these materials must be sold to students below market price if they are to be automatically billed, and students must be able to opt out of such charges. However, are these programs worth the trade-offs on transparency and choice to students, faculty, and institutions? Are discounts significant? Do they last? Do students have real decision making power in opting out? What other conditions exist?