Canelo / Arts Council England |
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Literature in the 21st Century: Understanding Models of Support for Literary Fiction
pyramid. While the market may be highly skewed to a few big winners,
that doesn’t mean even they are in a good position when compared
with other periods or countries.
In short, what all of this means is that it is harder to be a professional
author full stop. In 2005, an ACLS-commissioned survey found that
40% of authors earned a full-time living solely from writing. By 2013 this
had dropped to just 11.5%. In 2013, 17% of surveyed writers earned no
money at all from their writing. Between 2007 and 2013 author earnings
fell by 28% in real terms.
8
The author Philip Pullman has recently been
vocal about this trend, even asking the EU to investigate the situation
around author incomes.
9
Author income inequality as outlined above exceeds available data
for UK income inequality generally, where the top 1% take around
14–15% of the total (less than in the US but much more than most
countries in the OECD). However, this isn’t the case when we look
at wealth as opposed to income: the top 1% own as much wealth as
the bottom 55%. That is to say, wealth inequality is much greater than
income inequality. It suggests that books should be seen as assets
(wealth) rather than income for those at the very top, where the scale
of inequality reflects the sharper degree found in wealth inequality. In
terms of income, then, the book market is more unequal than the UK
as a whole; in terms of ‘wealth’ it is not.
Other researchers support the overall picture outlined here. Angus
Phillips, Director of the Oxford International Centre for Publishing
Studies, has tracked the publishing market against GDP for
Publishing
Research Quarterly
. He wanted to see if growth or decline in the wider
economic context fed through to UK publishing. Looking at data going
back to 1985 he finds that for the years 1985 to 1999 there is indeed a
strong correlation between the economy and publishing; GDP growth
appears to feed into growth in book sales. But in the noughties, and
especially in the wake of the financial crisis, this relationship breaks
down. Economic growth in the years after 2008 has not fed through to
books, apart from in children’s. Publishing has in effect decoupled from
deep patterns of growth and consumer spending. Rising per capita GDP
no longer means rising book sales. Phillips argues his data indicate an
historical inflection point, a structural change in the publishing landscape
where we may have reached ‘peak book’.
How to make sense of all this? Digital, as we will see, is a factor.
Yet aside from that, our interviewees and survey respondents had
numerous explanations. A common theme, as mentioned above,
8
http://www.thebookseller.com/news/huge-inequality-writer-earnings
9
https://www.theguardian.com/books/2016/jan/14/philip-pullman-resigns-oxford-literary-festival-patron-pay-authors
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