Canelo / Arts Council England |
19
Literature in the 21st Century: Understanding Models of Support for Literary Fiction
individually, the year-on-year evidence suggests that such breakout hits
are selling fewer copies overall and making less money (in print) than
they would have done in previous years.
All of this has two knock-on effects, both relevant and worrying for
those concerned about how writers might support themselves. Firstly,
the number of bookshops is shrinking. In 2005 there were still 1,535
independent bookshops in the UK, although that figure is in itself lower
than during the mid-nineties
4
. By 2014 that number was down to 987.
By 2017 it was fewer than 900, although there is evidence that new
ones have started opening (e.g. Libreria, from former Downing Street
advisor Rohan Silva, Lutyens & Rubinstein from a literary agency, and
the continued expansion of Foyles)
5
. Over the same period, chains
such as Ottakar’s were absorbed into Waterstones, and Borders
went bust. While not as bad as the situation in Japan, which has seen
more than half its bookshops close in the past 20 years, there are still
fewer outlets for selling books. A recent report from the Booksellers
Association in association with the Centre for Economics and Business
Research,
Bookselling Britain
, makes the opportunities and challenges
clear.
6
It highlights how bookselling is still a major force, underpinning
46,000 UK jobs (around half directly, the rest in supply-chain), adding
double the gross value added (GVA) compared with the retail average,
and making a serious contribution to GDP. In addition, it makes clear
the value of bookshops to high streets and cultural life (Waterstones
alone has put on 5,000 events in 2017 to date). But it also highlights a
daunting range of challenges: growth was negative in the years 2010
to 2014, averaging – 2.8% per year. Amazon and online retail, business
rates and taxation more widely, and the increasing costs of maintaining
bricks and mortar retail property, were all cited as major issues.
Secondly, this translates into a squeeze on author incomes. Here, the
perception that the market was split between winners and losers was
borne out. 2015 Nielsen BookScan data suggests that the top 1% of
authors accounted for 32.8% of all sales and within this, the top 0.1%
accounted for 13% of total sales. Meanwhile the top 5% accounted
for 42.3% and the top 10% accounted for 57% of all sales. Indeed,
there is evidence the market is growing more unequal.
7
The amount
earned by the top 0.1% increased by 21% against 2014. The top three
authors – David Walliams, Julia Donaldson and J.K. Rowling – were all
(primarily) children’s writers. Yet as we have seen, even at the top of
this distribution things can be challenging, let alone further down the
4
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/books/booknews/10654506/Decline-of-the-independent-bookshop-as-UK-figures-fall-be-
low-1000-for-first-time.html
5
http://www.thebookseller.com/news/indies-fear-impact-new-increased-overheads-323811
6
https://cebr.com/wp/wp-content/uploads/2017/10/Bookselling-Britain-report.pdf
7
https://www.equalitytrust.org.uk/scale-economic-inequality-uk
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