Canelo / Arts Council England
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Literature in the 21st Century report
Fiction General Value
Canelo / Arts Council England | 12 Literature in the 21st Century: Understanding Models of Support for Literary Fiction In absolute terms then, the value of the literary fiction market is not healthy. The overall picture for printed books, and especially fiction, is at best muted, and at worst represents a permanent and significant fall back. It is instructive, however, to compare the general situation with the US. There, book sales rose 2.5% in 2015 and 3.3% in 2016, a move that was generally regarded as extremely positive, as this followed years of falling sales. But sales for fiction were not healthy, falling 1% in 2016
1 . Bookstore sales went from $17bn in 2007 to just $10.9bn in 2014, although this had climbed again to nearly $12bn by the close of 2016. Much of this is to do with ebooks, digital sales, the recession and perhaps most worryingly, a shift in consumer habits 2 third down on 2007. In Japan the situation is even worse – the market peaked in 1996, with year-on-year declines posted every year since. In this context, the UK market looks comparatively healthy. Value doesn’t tell the whole story, however. While quantities of books sold roughly track value, they also reveal some interesting trends in their own right – trends that are critical to understanding how literary writers are to support themselves today. It is not just the total value of books that has fallen – it is the price at which individual copies are sold. According to the Nielsen BookScan data, the average selling price for hardback fiction is down 44% in real terms since 2001. In 2016 the average hardback fiction title sold for £10.12 whereas in 2001 it sold for £11.91. Adjusted for inflation (using the UK Office of National Statistics Consumer Price Inflation [CPI] Index as the benchmark) this would equate to £18.06 in 2016 terms. The average selling price for paperbacks is down 25.2% in real terms over the same period. In 2016 the average paperback fiction title sold for £7.42 against a 2001 figure of £6.89. Adjusted for inflation, the 2001 price would have been £10.45. This means that even for the value to stay still, many more books would need to have been sold, whereas instead there were substantial declines in volume terms. Writers and publishers are hence hit with a double whammy: falling book sales overall, and falling dividends for the sales they are making. It is not clear how long these two trends will continue. There is, however, evidence that the price of hardbacks is starting to increase (discussed in section three below). We believe this increase, like much of the decreases, can be explained by the introduction of the ebook format. 1 https://www.publishersweekly.com/pw/by-topic/industry-news/bookselling/article/72450-print-book-sales-rose-again-in-2016. html 2 http://publishersweekly.com/pw/by-topic/industry-news/bookselling/article/69388-bookstore-sales-had-first-gain-in-eight- years-in-2015.html and https://www.publishersweekly.com/pw/by-topic/industry-news/bookselling/article/72792-bookstore-sales-rose-2-5-in-2016. html
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