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Affordable Textbooks

 

What's New

On Nov. 15th, the House Education and Labor Committee included significant legislation to lower the cost of textbooks for students in their higher education reform legislation. The College Opportunity and Affordability Act mandates that publishers provide the price of textbooks when they market them to faculty, that they sell textbooks unbundled from their accompanying workbooks and CD-ROMs, and that schools provide students with class book lists during the prior semester to facilitate shopping. The House of Representatives will vote on the full bill during this winter.

Overview

Students spend an average of $900 a year on textbooks—20 percent of tuition at an average university and half of tuition at a community college. Textbook prices have increased at four times the rate of inflation since 1994 and continue to rise.

Our research demonstrates that the rising costs of textbooks is not inevitable, and that policy solutions exist to make textbooks part of an affordable college education. Publishers produce new editions of textbooks every 3 and a half years—even in fields where information hasn’t changed significantly like math and chemistry. New editions prevent faculty and bookstores from using the old edition.

Publishers also “bundle” lots of extras with their textbooks—CD-ROMs and workbooks that drive up prices and make books harder to resell.

Professors and college administrations can do a lot to to rein in high prices, but Congress should require publishers to curb practices that drive up the cost of a college education.

 

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