The Knowledge Toll
How Academic Publishers Captured the Distribution of Publicly Funded Science — and What It Costs Everyone Else
The Architecture
The National Institutes of Health spent $47 billion on research in fiscal year 2023. The scientists who produced that research wrote their findings up, submitted them to academic journals, and received no payment. Other scientists reviewed those submissions for accuracy and rigor, and received no payment. Elsevier published the results and earned an operating margin of 34.8%. This post explains how that happened.
The sticky note in the image at the top of this series reads: Check Interlibrary Loan. It is taped to a library terminal. On the screen behind it, a padlock icon sits above the words Access Denied. To the left of the terminal, a stack of printed papers — research, evidence, scholarship — sits in a quiet study area. The papers exist. The knowledge is real. The screen says you cannot have it unless you pay.
The person who wrote the paper was paid by a university. The university was funded in part by federal grants. The federal grants were funded by taxpayers. The peer reviewer who validated the paper was paid by a different university. That university was also funded in part by federal grants. The journal that published the paper — and is now denying access to it on a library computer — was paid nothing by the author, nothing by the reviewer, and received the underlying research as a free input to a product it sells back to the institutions whose employees created it.
Elsevier's Scientific, Technical and Medical segment operating margin was 34.8% in 2025. Apple's operating margin is approximately 31%. The most profitable segment of one of the world's most profitable publishing companies produces no knowledge. It owns the channel through which publicly funded knowledge must pass to be considered legitimate — and charges the institutions that created it for the privilege of reading it back.
The Chain, Step by Step
The academic publishing architecture is most clearly understood as a production chain in which every step that creates value is performed by parties who are not the publisher, and the publisher captures the distribution monopoly that makes access to that value chargeable.
The chain contains no step at which Elsevier contributes to the creation of knowledge. It contributes formatting, hosting, and the distribution infrastructure — functions that are not trivial but are not remotely equivalent in value to the scientific work they distribute. The 34.8% operating margin is not a return on knowledge production. It is a return on channel ownership.
How the Channel Was Captured
The academic journal system did not begin as an extraction architecture. It began as a legitimate solution to a genuine problem: how to disseminate scientific findings to a global community of researchers in an era when physical printing and distribution were expensive, and no single institution had the infrastructure to publish across all fields.
In the post-World War II period, a generation of commercial publishers — Robert Maxwell of Pergamon Press most prominently — recognized that academic journals had a structural property unlike any other publishing product. The buyers (university libraries) were captive: they could not choose not to subscribe to journals their researchers needed. The suppliers (authors and peer reviewers) were free: they contributed their work in exchange for professional legitimacy, not payment. The product (the journal brand and its impact factor) was self-reinforcing: the more prestigious journals attracted the best papers, which attracted the best citations, which increased prestige, which attracted more submissions.
Maxwell's insight — which he pursued aggressively through the 1960s and 1970s through journal acquisitions, new title launches, and price escalation — was that this structure supported indefinite price increases. Libraries could not cancel subscriptions to journals their faculty needed without harming those faculty's access to the literature. They would absorb price increases rather than cancel. The price sensitivity that constrains most markets did not apply. Subscription prices could be raised annually, at rates far exceeding inflation, with minimal cancellation response.
The "serials crisis" — the term librarians began using in the 1980s and 1990s to describe the unsustainable escalation of journal subscription costs — is the academic library system's name for what happened when the Maxwell insight was replicated and refined across the industry. By the time the internet arrived and made digital distribution essentially free, the commercial publishers had assembled portfolios of journals covering every major field, locked in through faculty career incentives that made cancellation professionally costly, and positioned to charge for digital access on top of — or instead of — print subscriptions.
The internet did not disrupt the academic publishing architecture. It lowered the cost of distribution to near zero — and the publishers passed most of that cost reduction to their margins, not to their customers.
The Journal Impact Factor: The Career Incentive That Locks the Architecture
The most durable element of the academic publishing architecture is not the subscription price or the copyright transfer requirement. It is the journal impact factor — the metric by which academic careers are evaluated, tenure decisions are made, grant applications are assessed, and institutional prestige is measured.
The impact factor is a number published by Clarivate (the company that owns the Journal Citation Reports database) representing how often articles in a given journal are cited in the two years following publication. High-impact journals attract more submissions. More submissions allow editors to be more selective. More selectivity produces higher-quality papers. Higher-quality papers attract more citations. Citations increase the impact factor. The cycle is self-reinforcing and produces a stable hierarchy of journal prestige that benefits the publishers who own the prestigious titles.
A scientist who wants to be hired, tenured, promoted, or funded needs publications in high-impact journals. The high-impact journals are overwhelmingly owned by Elsevier, Springer Nature, Wiley, and their commercial peers. The scientist has no realistic choice but to submit to those journals, transfer copyright as a condition of publication, and receive no payment for the product that the journal will then sell back to the scientist's own institution.
The impact factor lock is the architecture's most elegant instrument. It does not require the publisher to compel submission. It requires only that the institutions that employ and evaluate scientists treat the publisher's metric as the legitimate measure of scientific quality. Once that norm is established — and it was established over decades, through the same self-reinforcing prestige cycle — the publisher's position is structurally defended by the professional incentives of the very people whose work the publisher sells.
The Scale of the Extraction
Aggregate university library spending on journal subscriptions in the United States runs to billions of dollars annually. The Association of Research Libraries tracks member institution expenditures: serial subscription costs at major research universities have increased at rates consistently above inflation for decades. Individual institutions — MIT, Harvard, the University of California system — have periodically made their subscription costs public in the context of cancellation negotiations, revealing packages in the range of $2 million to $11 million annually for access to a single publisher's portfolio.
When the University of California system cancelled its Elsevier contract in 2019, it was paying approximately $11 million per year for access to Elsevier's journals. The UC system's researchers had produced a significant fraction of the papers in those journals. The system was paying $11 million annually to read work its own faculty had written, reviewed by other faculty who received nothing, in journals whose brand value UC researchers had built through decades of publication and citation.
The UC cancellation — the largest institutional break with a major publisher in the history of academic publishing — lasted until 2021, when the UC system reached a new agreement with Elsevier that included open access provisions. The negotiation was costly, contentious, and produced a partial reform. It did not change the underlying architecture. Elsevier's operating margin in 2025 was 34.8%.
What the Architecture Requires
The academic publishing architecture requires four conditions to function. All four are currently present, though the NIH zero-embargo policy effective July 2025 and the open access movement documented in Posts 3 and 4 are beginning to erode them at the margins.
It requires that publicly funded research be produced by scientists who transfer copyright to publishers as a condition of publication. It requires that those publishers be permitted to restrict access to the resulting papers behind subscription paywalls. It requires that university libraries pay those subscription costs from budgets that cannot be easily redirected. And it requires that faculty career evaluation systems treat publisher-controlled impact factors as the legitimate measure of scientific quality, creating the professional incentive that keeps scientists submitting to commercial journals rather than alternatives.
Remove any one of these conditions and the architecture begins to fail. The NIH zero-embargo rule attacks the second condition: publicly funded NIH research must now be deposited in PubMed Central and made freely available on publication date, regardless of the publisher's paywall. The open access movement attacks all four simultaneously, with uneven results. The career incentive lock — the impact factor — has proven the most resistant to reform.
Post 2 examines the instrument that sustains the architecture at the institutional level: the Big Deal bundle, which binds universities into multi-journal packages that make cancellation economically irrational regardless of whether any individual journal merits its subscription cost. It is the lock that keeps the door closed even when individual actors can see through it.
- RELX/Elsevier STM operating margin: 34.8% (2025); 33.9% (2024) — RELX Annual Report
- NIH annual research spend: ~$47B (FY2023) — NIH budget records
- Author payment: zero; peer reviewer payment: zero; copyright transferred to publisher
- University subscription cost range: $10K–$50K per journal per year
- UC system Elsevier contract: ~$11M/year; cancellation 2019; renegotiation 2021
- Robert Maxwell / Pergamon Press: serial acquisitions 1960s–1970s; price escalation model
- Serials crisis: documented from 1980s; ARL subscription cost tracking ongoing
- Journal Citation Reports (Clarivate): impact factor as career evaluation instrument
- NIH zero-embargo policy: effective July 1, 2025 — posts in PMC on publication date
The total aggregate annual amount paid by all American university libraries to Elsevier, Springer Nature, Wiley, and their commercial peers — the complete annual extraction from the U.S. academic system — is not compiled in a single publicly accessible source. The Association of Research Libraries tracks member institution costs, and individual institutional disclosures provide data points, but a comprehensive national aggregate has not been published.
The precise historical trajectory of journal price escalation relative to inflation across the full period since Maxwell's acquisitions is documented in segments but not in a single comprehensive longitudinal study accessible to this series. The general pattern — consistent above-inflation escalation — is well-established; the precise annual rates across all major publishers are not uniformly documented in public sources.
The internal Elsevier deliberations on pricing strategy, bundle structure, and negotiating positions with individual universities are not public. The wall runs at those documents — which are the interior of the architecture's commercial logic.
Primary Sources · Post 1
- RELX 2025 Annual Report — STM segment operating margins (33.9% 2024, 34.8% 2025)
- NIH Budget FY2023 — $47 billion research investment; NIH Office of Budget
- NIH Public Access Policy 2024 (NOT-OD-25-101) — zero embargo effective July 1, 2025
- University of California Office of Scholarly Communication — Elsevier cancellation 2019; renegotiation 2021 documentation
- Association of Research Libraries — serial subscription cost tracking; ARL Statistics
- Robert Maxwell and Pergamon Press — publishing history: Andrew Currah, "Hollywood vs. the Internet" (2006); Aileen Fyfe et al., "Untangling Academic Publishing" (2017, Zenodo)
- Journal Citation Reports — Clarivate; impact factor methodology documentation
- Academic publishing economics: Ted Bergstrom et al., "Evaluating Big Deal Journal Bundles" (PNAS, 2014)
- 2012 House Science Committee Hearing — federally funded research and public access; Elsevier margins cited in testimony



