Monday, April 20, 2026

The Knowledge Toll — FSA Enclosure Series · Post 3 of 4

The Knowledge Toll — FSA Enclosure Series · Post 3 of 4
The Knowledge Toll  ·  FSA Enclosure Series Post 3 of 4

The Knowledge Toll

How Academic Publishers Captured the Distribution of Publicly Funded Science — and What It Costs Everyone Else

The Open Counter

arXiv has hosted physics and mathematics preprints since 1991 — free, immediate, no paywall, no embargo, no Article Processing Charge. Its annual budget is approximately $2 million. Elsevier's STM segment generates over $3 billion in annual revenue at a 34.8% margin. The counter-architecture has existed for thirty-three years. This post documents what it is, what the NIH zero-embargo mandate adds to it as of July 2025, and why the impact factor lock remains the single obstacle preventing the counter-architecture from replacing the toll entirely.

In August 1991, Paul Ginsparg — then a physicist at Los Alamos National Laboratory — set up an email-based system for distributing preprints of physics papers to colleagues. The system allowed researchers to deposit manuscripts, share them with the community before formal publication, and access each other's work without institutional subscription. Within months, thousands of papers were being distributed. Within years, it had become the primary means through which high-energy physicists shared findings — faster than peer review, faster than journal publication, faster than library subscription processing.

The system became arXiv. Today it hosts over two million papers across physics, mathematics, computer science, quantitative biology, and related fields. Its annual operating budget is approximately $2 million. Cornell University and the Simons Foundation provide the majority of its funding. It charges authors nothing to deposit. It charges readers nothing to access. It employs no peer reviewers at commercial salaries, pays no editors a commercial rate, and has no shareholders.

Elsevier's STM segment generates over $3 billion in annual revenue at a 34.8% operating margin. Both systems distribute scientific knowledge. One costs $2 million to operate. The other generates over $1 billion in annual profit. The difference between those two numbers is not the cost of distribution. It is the toll — and the toll has been operating alongside a functional alternative for thirty-three years.

"arXiv operates on $2 million per year. Elsevier's STM segment generates over $3 billion at a 34.8% margin. Both distribute scientific knowledge. The difference is not the cost of distribution. It is the toll — and the toll has operated alongside a functional alternative for thirty-three years without being displaced." FSA Analysis · Post 3

The Counter-Architecture: Four Instruments

Counter-Instrument 1
arXiv — The Original Bypass
Founded 1991 at Los Alamos; now operated by Cornell University. Over 2 million preprints across physics, mathematics, computer science, quantitative biology, economics. Zero cost to deposit; zero cost to access. Annual budget approximately $2 million. Standard dissemination channel in physics and mathematics — papers are read, cited, and built upon from arXiv before and often instead of their journal versions. The preprint server does not replace peer review for credentialing purposes, but it demonstrates unambiguously that distribution of scientific knowledge requires neither a commercial publisher nor a paywall.
Counter-Instrument 2
bioRxiv and medRxiv — Life Sciences and Medicine Join
bioRxiv launched 2013 at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory; medRxiv in 2019 (Cold Spring Harbor, Yale, BMJ). The COVID-19 pandemic provided the most significant test of preprint infrastructure in the system's history: within weeks of the outbreak, preprints on viral structure, transmission, and therapeutic candidates were distributed globally and informing public health decisions before any peer-reviewed publication completed review. The pandemic demonstrated that preprint distribution at global scale is technically straightforward, institutionally manageable, and scientifically valuable — and that the commercial journal system's timeline is a commercial convention, not a scientific necessity.
Counter-Instrument 3
Plan S and cOAlition S — The Funder Mandate
Launched September 2018 by approximately 28 European research funders. Core requirement: immediate open access with zero embargo and author rights retention (CC BY license by default) for all peer-reviewed articles from funded research. Transformative arrangements — the industry's revenue-preservation-as-reform strategy — lost cOAlition S support at end of 2024 after explicitly failing to produce genuine transition. The 2026–2030 strategy pivots to diamond open access, where neither authors nor readers pay, and to preprint infrastructure. Plan S is the first major coordinated funder refusal to subsidize the commercial publishing toll through grant funding.
Counter-Instrument 4
NIH Zero-Embargo Mandate — The Scale Instrument
Effective July 1, 2025. Every peer-reviewed article resulting from NIH funding — accepted on or after that date — must be deposited in PubMed Central and made publicly available with zero embargo on the official publication date. The Government Use License embedded in NIH funding agreements gives the federal government an irrevocable right to make the Author Accepted Manuscript available, overriding conflicting publisher agreements. NIH funds approximately $47 billion in research annually. No APC is required for compliance — authors deposit accepted manuscripts directly. The publisher's version of record remains behind its paywall; the NIH-deposited manuscript is freely accessible simultaneously on the same day.

The NIH Mandate: What Changed on July 1, 2025

The NIH's 2008 public access policy required deposit in PubMed Central within twelve months of publication — a twelve-month embargo that gave publishers a year of exclusive subscription revenue before the paper became freely accessible. The 2025 policy eliminated that embargo entirely.

The mechanism is the Government Use License: a provision in NIH grant funding agreements giving the federal government an irrevocable, royalty-free right to make the Author Accepted Manuscript publicly available. Because this right is embedded in the grant agreement — not negotiated with the publisher after acceptance — it supersedes conflicting publisher copyright terms. An NIH-funded author who transfers copyright to Elsevier cannot waive the government's pre-existing right. The publisher's version of record remains behind its paywall; the accepted manuscript is freely accessible simultaneously.

PubMed Central is not a preprint server. It hosts accepted, peer-reviewed manuscripts — the same scientific content as the paywalled journal version — made available at no cost on the same day the journal version publishes. A researcher at a community college, an independent practitioner, a scientist in a developing country institution without full journal subscriptions, can now obtain every NIH-funded paper through PMC on its publication day. No interlibrary loan. No 30-minute library terminal time limit. No sticky note directing them to another route.

"The NIH zero-embargo mandate makes every NIH-funded paper freely available in PubMed Central on its publication date. The same peer-reviewed content behind Elsevier's paywall is simultaneously available, at no cost, to anyone in the world with an internet connection. The toll remains. The bypass now has a federal mandate behind it." FSA Analysis · Post 3

The Impact Factor Lock: Why the Counter-Architecture Hasn't Won

If arXiv has existed since 1991, if preprint servers host millions of papers, if the NIH now mandates free access to its funded research — why does Elsevier's operating margin remain 34.8%? Why do universities continue paying billions in subscription fees and APCs?

The answer is the impact factor lock. The career incentive that keeps scientists submitting to commercial journals is not irrational. It is structurally correct given the evaluation systems their employers and funders use. A physicist at a research university needs publications in high-impact journals to be hired, to receive tenure, to win grants, to be promoted. The journals with the highest impact factors in most fields are owned by commercial publishers. Depositing on arXiv is standard practice and professionally unremarkable. Publishing in an arXiv-only preprint is professionally damaging. The preprint demonstrates the science. The journal publication certifies the career. Those are two different things, and the commercial publishers own the certification system.

The impact factor is produced by Clarivate, a private company, using a proprietary methodology widely criticized by researchers and professional societies. It was designed as a tool for libraries to evaluate journal subscriptions. Through decades of adoption by hiring committees, tenure review bodies, and grant panels — adoption that publishers encouraged at every opportunity — it became the de facto standard for evaluating individual scientific careers.

Reforming the impact factor lock requires changing the behavior of thousands of hiring committees, tenure review bodies, and grant panels simultaneously. Every individual actor is rational to continue using impact factor as a criterion as long as every other actor does. The coordination problem is the architecture's deepest defense — deeper than the Big Deal, deeper than the NDA, deeper than the APC. It is the reason thirty-three years of preprint infrastructure have not displaced the toll.

"The preprint demonstrates the science. The journal publication certifies the career. Those are two different things, and the commercial publishers own the certification system. That single distinction — not the distribution channel, not the paywall, not the bundle — is what has sustained the toll against thirty-three years of open counter-infrastructure." FSA Analysis · Post 3

Diamond Open Access: The Iowa Moment

The counter-architecture has an Iowa moment. Diamond open access is a publishing model in which both authors and readers pay nothing. Publication costs are borne by funders, institutions, or disciplinary societies. The journal charges no APCs. It charges no subscription fees. It publishes peer-reviewed research freely, immediately, and permanently.

Diamond OA journals operate across virtually every scientific discipline. The Public Library of Science — PLOS — has published peer-reviewed research since 2003 with APCs subsidized or waived for researchers without funding. European Open Science Cloud and national open science initiatives in Germany, the Netherlands, and Scandinavia fund diamond OA infrastructure at the institutional level. The cOAlition S 2026–2030 strategy explicitly prioritizes diamond OA as its primary model going forward — explicitly because it eliminates the APC double-dipping problem and cannot be captured as a revenue stream by commercial publishers.

Diamond OA is not a theoretical model. It operates. It publishes rigorous peer-reviewed science. It does so without a 34.8% operating margin flowing to shareholders. The obstacle is identical to Iowa's: a functioning, lower-cost, publicly beneficial alternative exists and has existed for years. The career incentive lock — the hiring committee that still weights a commercial journal over PLOS, the grant panel that still treats impact factor as quality proxy — is the single mechanism through which the toll maintains position against an alternative that has already proved itself.

What the Counter-Architecture Has Already Won

The NIH twelve-month embargo is gone. Every NIH-funded paper published after July 1, 2025 is freely available in PubMed Central on publication day. This is the largest single expansion of free public access to scientific research in American history. The transformative agreement is effectively dead as a reform instrument — explicitly named and rejected by the funders who were sustaining it. The preprint infrastructure is now standard in physics, mathematics, and computer science, and expanding rapidly in life sciences following the COVID-19 cultural shift.

The toll has not fallen. But the siege infrastructure is more developed than it has ever been. Post 4 examines the lobby that has defended the toll through every reform cycle — and what approximately $3 million in annual federal lobbying buys the industry that produces no knowledge but owns its distribution.

FSA Layer Certification · Post 3 of 4
L1
arXiv — Verified Founded 1991 Los Alamos; Cornell University operation. 2M+ papers; ~$2M annual budget (Cornell, Simons Foundation). Zero deposit/access cost. Standard dissemination in physics and mathematics. Documented in arXiv institutional reports.
L2
bioRxiv / medRxiv — Verified bioRxiv 2013 (Cold Spring Harbor); medRxiv 2019 (Cold Spring Harbor/Yale/BMJ). COVID-19 preprint role in accelerating research dissemination extensively documented. Zero cost to deposit or access.
L3
NIH Zero-Embargo Mandate — Verified NOT-OD-25-101; effective July 1, 2025. AAM deposited in PMC; zero embargo on publication date. Government Use License (2 CFR 200.315) overrides publisher copyright. No APC required for compliance. Replaces 2008 12-month embargo policy.
L4
Plan S / cOAlition S — Verified Launched September 2018; ~28 funders. Transformative arrangements ended December 31, 2024. 2026–2030 strategy: diamond OA and preprint infrastructure (coalition-s.org, November 2025).
L5
Impact Factor Lock — Verified Clarivate / Journal Citation Reports: proprietary metric used as hiring, tenure, promotion, and grant criterion. Publisher dominance of high-impact journals documented. Coordination problem preventing reform identified in science policy literature. DORA commitments exist; institutional behavior change not yet at displacement scale.
Live Nodes · The Knowledge Toll · Post 3
  • arXiv: 1991; 2M+ papers; ~$2M/year; Cornell/Simons — arxiv.org
  • bioRxiv: 2013 (Cold Spring Harbor); medRxiv: 2019 (Cold Spring Harbor/Yale/BMJ)
  • COVID-19 preprint role: cultural shift in life sciences documented
  • NIH zero-embargo: effective July 1, 2025; NOT-OD-25-101; PMC same-day deposit
  • Government Use License: 2 CFR 200.315; overrides publisher copyright transfers
  • NIH annual budget: ~$47B; full output subject to zero-embargo mandate post-July 2025
  • Plan S: September 2018; transformative arrangements ended December 2024
  • cOAlition S 2026–2030: diamond OA and preprints — November 2025
  • Impact factor lock: Clarivate/JCR; career evaluation instrument; coordination problem
  • DORA: San Francisco Declaration on Research Assessment — impact factor reform commitments
FSA Wall · Post 3

NIH zero-embargo compliance rates for the post-July 2025 period are not yet published in systematic monitoring data. The NIH enforces through eRA Commons and RPPR reporting; aggregate compliance statistics have not been released as of this writing.

The long-term impact of the zero-embargo mandate on commercial publisher subscription revenue — how much, over what timeline, the PMC bypass will reduce the effective value of library subscriptions — is not calculable from current data. The behavioral responses of libraries, publishers, and researchers have not stabilized.

Whether DORA commitments and similar impact factor reform initiatives will translate into changed hiring and tenure decisions at the scale required to shift the architecture is genuinely uncertain. Individual institutions have adopted DORA; system-wide behavior change is not yet documented at displacement scale. The wall runs at that coordination threshold.

Primary Sources · Post 3

  1. arXiv institutional reports — Cornell University; annual statistics, budget (arxiv.org)
  2. NIH NOT-OD-25-101 — accelerated effective date July 1, 2025; PMC deposit requirement
  3. NIH Public Access Policy Overview — 2024 policy; Government Use License (2 CFR 200.315)
  4. cOAlition S — Plan S launch September 2018; transformative arrangement end December 2024; Strategy 2026–2030 (November 2025) — coalition-s.org
  5. bioRxiv founding — Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2013; medRxiv 2019
  6. PLOS — Public Library of Science; diamond OA model — plos.org
  7. San Francisco Declaration on Research Assessment (DORA) — sfdora.org
  8. Clarivate / Journal Citation Reports — impact factor methodology
  9. Hicks et al., "The Leiden Manifesto for Research Metrics," Nature (2015)
  10. Suber, Peter, "Open Access" (MIT Press, 2012)
← Post 2: The Bundle Sub Verbis · Vera Post 4: The Lobby →

Sunday, April 19, 2026

The Knowledge Toll — FSA Enclosure Series · Post 2 of 4

The Knowledge Toll — FSA Enclosure Series · Post 2 of 4
The Knowledge Toll  ·  FSA Enclosure Series Post 2 of 4

The Knowledge Toll

How Academic Publishers Captured the Distribution of Publicly Funded Science — and What It Costs Everyone Else

The Bundle

In the 1990s, commercial academic publishers invented a licensing structure that made cancellation economically irrational regardless of whether any individual journal justified its cost. They called it the Big Deal. A 2014 analysis found that at many institutions, more than half the journals in a Big Deal package received zero citations from local faculty in any measured year. The subscriptions continued anyway. This post examines how the bundle works, why it holds, and how the Article Processing Charge migration preserved the revenue stream when reform pressure threatened to break it.

Before the Big Deal, university libraries subscribed to journals individually. A library would assess which journals its faculty actually used, rank them by cost-per-use, and cancel subscriptions that fell below the threshold where maintenance costs exceeded the cost of obtaining articles on demand through interlibrary loan. The individual subscription model was expensive and cumbersome, but it had one property that the publishers found intolerable: libraries could cancel.

The Big Deal eliminated cancellation as a practical option. By bundling hundreds or thousands of journals into a single multi-year licensing package — priced as a percentage increase over the institution's prior subscription spend — publishers converted a collection of individually cancellable subscriptions into a single unchancellable contract. The library that wanted the ten journals its faculty genuinely needed had to pay for the two thousand it did not need, because the ten were not available unbundled at a price that made individual subscription rational.

The bundle is the architecture's lock instrument. It is the mechanism that keeps the door closed even when individual actors can see through it clearly.

"The Big Deal eliminated cancellation as a practical option. The library that wanted the ten journals its faculty needed had to pay for the two thousand it did not, because the ten were not available unbundled at a rational price. The bundle is not a licensing structure. It is a cancellation-prevention instrument." FSA Analysis · Post 2

How the Big Deal Works

The mechanics of the Big Deal were developed and standardized in the late 1990s and early 2000s as publishers made the transition from print to digital delivery. Digital distribution offered genuine efficiency: instead of shipping physical journals to thousands of institutions, a publisher could provide online access to its entire portfolio at marginal cost near zero. The question was how to price that access.

The pricing structure the publishers developed reflected the foundational insight from Post 1: academic library demand is price-inelastic because cancellation carries professional costs that exceed subscription savings. The Big Deal formula typically established a base price anchored to the institution's prior print subscription spend, then applied an annual escalation rate — typically 3% to 6% above inflation — to a package covering the publisher's full journal portfolio. The institution received expanded access to a much larger number of titles than it had previously subscribed to, at a price calculated to capture most of the surplus value of that expansion for the publisher.

The contract terms reinforced the lock. Multi-year agreements — typically three to five years — prevented annual renegotiation. Non-disclosure clauses prohibited libraries from sharing their contract terms with peer institutions, preventing the price transparency that would allow libraries to negotiate collectively. Cancellation penalties and must-take provisions made mid-contract exit expensive. The bundle, the multi-year term, and the NDA together produced a structure in which the library's choice at contract renewal was not "how much should we pay" but "how much more than last time."

"Non-disclosure clauses in Big Deal contracts prevented libraries from sharing their terms with peers. A library could not know whether its deal was competitive because every other library had signed the same clause. The NDA is not commercial confidentiality protection. It is a price-transparency suppression instrument that serves exclusively the publisher." FSA Analysis · Post 2

The Usage Data: What the Bundle Actually Delivers

The most consequential analysis of Big Deal economics was published in 2014 by Ted Bergstrom and colleagues in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. Examining subscription data from a sample of research universities, they found that a significant fraction — at many institutions, more than half — of the journals included in Big Deal packages received zero citations from faculty at that institution in any given year. The institution was paying for access to journals that no member of its research community had cited, let alone read or used.

The cost-per-use calculation that the bundle structure makes impossible to perform on an ongoing basis would, if performed, reveal that the effective price per actual use of a bundled journal far exceeds any reasonable valuation of the content accessed. The journals that are used heavily are the prestigious titles that anchor the bundle — the ones that would command high prices in an unbundled market. The journals that are unused are the filler that justifies the bundle's size and annual price escalation, contributing nothing to research at the subscribing institution while contributing to the publisher's per-institution revenue.

The bundle packages value and non-value together at a price calibrated to the value, then makes it structurally impossible to separate them. This is the instrument in precise financial terms: the publisher sells ten journals' worth of value at two thousand journals' worth of price, and the contract makes separating the two categories economically infeasible.

The NDA: Price Transparency Suppression

The non-disclosure clause deserves specific FSA attention because it is the instrument that prevents the collective action that would otherwise constrain the bundle's pricing power. Academic libraries are not commercial competitors. They are public and nonprofit institutions whose aggregate subscription spending represents an enormous and largely coordinated potential market. If libraries could share their contract terms, they could identify above-market rates, negotiate collectively, and establish price floors below which publishers would lose enough contracts to threaten their revenue base.

The NDA prevents this. A library that signs a Big Deal contract agrees not to disclose its terms to peer institutions. The publisher negotiates with each institution individually, knowing its own full range of contract terms and knowing that no library knows any other library's deal. The information asymmetry is total and structural. The publisher holds complete price information across all contracts. Each library holds information about only its own. In a market where price discovery is the prerequisite for competitive negotiation, the NDA eliminates price discovery for the buyer while preserving it for the seller.

The Scholarly Publishing and Academic Resources Coalition maintains a Big Deal Cancellation Tracker and has advocated for NDA elimination. Some institutions have challenged NDA clauses on public transparency grounds. The publishers have resisted consistently, understanding precisely what price transparency would cost them.

The Major Publishers: The Concentration That Makes Exit Impossible

Publisher Journals (approx.) Bundle Structure Notable Cancellations / Disputes
Elsevier (RELX) ~2,500+ ScienceDirect Freedom Collection; multi-year NDAs UC system 2019–2021; MIT 2020; multiple European consortia
Springer Nature ~2,900+ SpringerLink packages; Nature portfolio as anchor German DEAL consortium multi-year negotiation; Swedish consortium cancellation
Wiley ~1,700+ Online Library packages; multi-year agreements Finnish consortium cancellation 2020; California State University system
Taylor & Francis ~2,700+ Online bundling across subject collections Various consortium renegotiations post-2018

The concentration of this market means that a university library cannot exit the bundle structure without denying its researchers access to a substantial fraction of the literature in their fields. A library that cancelled all four major publisher packages would leave its faculty unable to access the majority of recently published peer-reviewed research in virtually every discipline. No research university has taken that step. The bundle's lock operates precisely because the concentration makes the exit cost professionally and institutionally prohibitive.

The APC Migration: When Reform Becomes Revenue

The open access movement — examined in detail in Post 3 — has produced a response from commercial publishers that FSA identifies as an adaptation instrument rather than a genuine reform. The Article Processing Charge, or APC, is a fee paid by authors, institutions, or funders to make a specific article freely available online at publication without an embargo period.

In principle, the APC represents a model shift from reader-pays to author-pays. In practice, at major commercial publishers, the APC has been layered on top of the subscription model rather than replacing it, producing what the library community calls the double-dipping problem: universities pay subscription fees to access the journal's paywalled content, and also pay APCs when their researchers want specific articles made open access within the same journal. The publisher collects twice from the same institution — once for access, once for openness.

APC prices at major commercial journals range from approximately $2,000 to $15,000 per article. At Elsevier's flagship journals, APCs for open access publication can exceed $10,000. The estimated production cost of formatting and hosting a digital academic paper runs well under $1,000 by independent analysis. The APC premium above production cost is, like the subscription premium above distribution cost, a return on channel ownership and brand prestige — not on service delivered.

"The APC is the subscription model's adaptation to open access pressure. Universities pay to access the journal's content. They also pay APCs when their researchers want their papers made open within the same journal. The publisher collects twice from the same institution. The instrument changed. The extraction direction did not." FSA Analysis · Post 2

Transformative Agreements: Reform as Repackaging

Between approximately 2015 and 2024, the dominant instrument through which universities and publishers attempted to resolve the tension between subscription models and open access mandates was the transformative agreement — a contract structure combining subscription access with a commitment to transition toward open access over time, funded through a combined read-and-publish fee.

The cOAlition S funders — the European research funding consortium behind Plan S — supported transformative agreements through December 2024, treating them as a legitimate transition mechanism. They ended that support explicitly because transformative agreements had not produced meaningful transformation. Publishers had used them to preserve and in some cases increase revenue while appearing to comply with open access mandates. The instrument had been captured by the architecture it was designed to reform.

The cOAlition S 2026–2030 strategy pivots explicitly away from transformative agreements toward diamond open access — where publication and access are both free, with costs borne by funders or institutions rather than captured by commercial publishers — and toward preprint infrastructure that bypasses the commercial distribution monopoly entirely.

Post 3 examines what that bypass looks like in practice: arXiv, bioRxiv, the NIH zero-embargo mandate, and the open infrastructure movement building the alternative system the commercial publishers' monopoly depends on not existing.

FSA Layer Certification · Post 2 of 4
L1
Big Deal Structure — Verified Bundle licensing: multi-year multi-journal packages anchored to prior spend plus annual escalation. Individual cancellation made economically irrational by unbundled pricing. Developed late 1990s–early 2000s. Documented in library science literature, Congressional testimony, and publisher financial reports.
L2
Usage Data — Verified Bergstrom et al. (PNAS 2014): significant fraction of bundled journals at many sampled institutions received zero citations from local faculty in measured year. Value/non-value bundling at single aggregate price documented. Full national dataset not publicly available.
L3
NDA Instrument — Verified Non-disclosure clauses standard in Big Deal contracts: prohibit sharing terms with peer institutions. Total information asymmetry documented. SPARC Cancellation Tracker records NDA challenges. Publisher resistance to transparency documented in negotiation accounts.
L4
APC Double-Dipping — Verified Major commercial publishers charge subscription fees plus APCs ($2K–$15K+) for open access within same journal. Double-dipping term used by library community; pattern documented in institutional budget analyses. Elsevier flagship APCs documented in published rate schedules.
L5
Transformative Agreement Failure — Verified cOAlition S ended support for transformative arrangements December 31, 2024 — explicit citation of failure to produce meaningful transition. 2026–2030 strategy pivots to diamond OA and preprints. cOAlition S announcements and strategy documents on coalition-s.org.
Live Nodes · The Knowledge Toll · Post 2
  • Big Deal: multi-year bundle; individual cancellation unavailable at rational unbundled price
  • Bergstrom et al. (PNAS 2014): zero-citation journals in bundles at majority of sampled institutions
  • NDA clauses: standard in Big Deal contracts; suppress inter-institutional price transparency
  • SPARC Big Deal Cancellation Tracker: institutional cancellations and NDA challenges (sparcopen.org)
  • APC range: ~$2,000–$15,000+ per article; Elsevier flagship journals above $10,000
  • Double-dipping: subscription plus APC from same institution — documented pattern
  • Transformative agreements: cOAlition S support ended December 31, 2024
  • cOAlition S 2026–2030: diamond OA, preprints, open infrastructure — published November 2025
  • Market concentration: Elsevier, Springer Nature, Wiley, Taylor & Francis dominate peer-reviewed journals
FSA Wall · Post 2

The complete terms of Big Deal contracts — precise annual escalation rates, cancellation penalty structures, and the full scope of NDA provisions — are not publicly available for the majority of institutions. SPARC and individual institutional disclosures provide data points; a comprehensive national database of Big Deal terms does not exist in accessible public records.

The aggregate annual revenue Elsevier, Springer Nature, and Wiley collect specifically from Big Deal subscription contracts — as distinct from APC revenue, transformative agreements, or other streams — is not disaggregated in their public financial reporting in a way that allows precise calculation.

The internal publisher deliberations on APC pricing strategy — specifically whether prices above production cost are calibrated to maximize revenue extraction from institutions with open access mandates — are not public. The double-dipping pattern is documented in aggregate; the intent behind it is beyond the wall.

Primary Sources · Post 2

  1. Bergstrom, Ted C. et al., "Evaluating Big Deal Journal Bundles," PNAS 111(26), 2014
  2. SPARC Big Deal Cancellation Tracker — sparcopen.org; institutional cancellation data and NDA documentation
  3. cOAlition S announcement ending transformative agreement support, 2023 (coalition-s.org)
  4. cOAlition S Strategy 2026–2030, November 12, 2025 (coalition-s.org)
  5. UC Office of Scholarly Communication — Elsevier contract 2019 cancellation; 2021 renegotiation
  6. MIT Libraries — Elsevier contract cancellation 2020; public statement and rationale
  7. German DEAL consortium — Springer Nature and Wiley negotiations; outcomes documentation
  8. Elsevier APC rate schedules — elsevier.com; flagship journal open access pricing
  9. Frazier, K., "The Librarians' Dilemma," D-Lib Magazine (2001) — early Big Deal economics documentation
  10. Suber, Peter, "Open Access" (MIT Press, 2012) — subscription vs. OA economics analysis
← Post 1: The Architecture Sub Verbis · Vera Post 3: The Open Counter →

The Knowledge Toll — FSA Enclosure Series · Post 1 of 4

The Knowledge Toll — FSA Enclosure Series · Post 1 of 4
The Knowledge Toll  ·  FSA Enclosure Series Post 1 of 4

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.

34.8%
Elsevier STM Operating Margin
RELX 2025 Annual Report
~31%
Apple Operating Margin
For comparison
$47B
NIH Annual Research Spend
FY2023 — the input Elsevier doesn't pay for

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 Academic Publishing Value Chain — Who Does What, Who Gets Paid
NIH / NSF
Funds the research — $47B annually from NIH alone. The underlying science is produced with public money. The funder receives no royalty, no licensing fee, no revenue share from the resulting publications.
University
Pays the scientist's salary — often partially funded by the same federal grants. Provides lab space, equipment, support staff. Receives no payment from the publisher for the paper its employee produced on its premises with its resources.
Author
Writes the paper for free — no payment from the journal. In many cases, the author pays the journal an Article Processing Charge of $2,000 to $15,000 for the privilege of being published in open access format. The author transfers copyright to the publisher as a condition of publication.
Peer Reviewer
Validates the paper for free — no payment from the journal. Reviewers are typically academic scientists employed by universities, reviewing in their professional capacity as a service to the field. The quality assurance function that gives the journal its credibility costs the publisher nothing.
Elsevier / Springer / Wiley
Formats, hosts, and distributes — then charges the university $10,000 to $50,000 per journal per year to access the work its own faculty produced. Operating margin: 34.8%. Publisher contribution to the underlying knowledge: zero. Publisher's leverage: ownership of the distribution channel and the journal brand that faculty career incentives require.
University (again)
Pays the subscription — having already paid the salary of the person who wrote the paper, the salary of the person who reviewed it, and a portion of the grant that funded it. The same institution pays three times: to produce the knowledge, to validate it, and to read it.

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.

"Every step that creates value in academic publishing is performed by someone who is not the publisher. The scientist produces the knowledge for free. The reviewer validates it for free. The university pays the salary, the grant, and the subscription. The publisher owns the channel. The margin is 34.8%." FSA Analysis · Post 1

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 internet lowered the cost of distributing academic knowledge to near zero. The commercial publishers passed most of that reduction to their margins, not to their customers. Elsevier's operating margin in 2025 is 34.8%. The distribution problem the original publishers were paid to solve no longer exists at meaningful cost. The toll remains." FSA Analysis · Post 1

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%.

"The University of California system was paying $11 million per year to read work its own faculty had written, reviewed by faculty who received nothing, in journals whose brand value UC researchers had built through decades of publication. The cancellation lasted two years. The margin is 34.8%." FSA Analysis · Post 1

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.

FSA Layer Certification · Post 1 of 4
L1
Operating Margin — Verified RELX/Elsevier STM segment operating margin: 33.9% (2024), 34.8% (2025) — RELX 2025 Annual Report. Historically described as among the highest margins of any industry; exceeded Apple in peak years. Publisher contribution to underlying knowledge production: zero.
L2
Value Chain Structure — Verified Author receives no payment; peer reviewers receive no payment; copyright typically transferred to publisher as condition of publication. University pays salary, grant costs, and subscription. Federal funders receive no royalty or revenue share. Documented in standard journal publishing agreements and academic labor literature.
L3
Channel Capture History — Verified Robert Maxwell / Pergamon Press journal acquisition strategy 1960s–1970s documented in publishing history literature. Serials crisis (library subscription cost escalation above inflation) documented from 1980s onward by Association of Research Libraries. Maxwell insight on captive library buyers and price inelasticity documented in academic publishing economics literature.
L4
UC System Case — Verified University of California Elsevier contract: ~$11M/year; cancellation 2019; renegotiation 2021. Documented in UC Office of Scholarly Communication press releases, The Chronicle of Higher Education, and Science reporting. Largest institutional Elsevier cancellation in academic publishing history.
L5
Impact Factor Lock — Verified Journal Citation Reports owned by Clarivate. Impact factor as tenure/promotion/grant evaluation criterion documented in faculty governance literature and institutional review policies across major research universities. Self-reinforcing prestige cycle documented in academic publishing economics.
Live Nodes · The Knowledge Toll · Post 1
  • 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
FSA Wall · Post 1

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

  1. RELX 2025 Annual Report — STM segment operating margins (33.9% 2024, 34.8% 2025)
  2. NIH Budget FY2023 — $47 billion research investment; NIH Office of Budget
  3. NIH Public Access Policy 2024 (NOT-OD-25-101) — zero embargo effective July 1, 2025
  4. University of California Office of Scholarly Communication — Elsevier cancellation 2019; renegotiation 2021 documentation
  5. Association of Research Libraries — serial subscription cost tracking; ARL Statistics
  6. Robert Maxwell and Pergamon Press — publishing history: Andrew Currah, "Hollywood vs. the Internet" (2006); Aileen Fyfe et al., "Untangling Academic Publishing" (2017, Zenodo)
  7. Journal Citation Reports — Clarivate; impact factor methodology documentation
  8. Academic publishing economics: Ted Bergstrom et al., "Evaluating Big Deal Journal Bundles" (PNAS, 2014)
  9. 2012 House Science Committee Hearing — federally funded research and public access; Elsevier margins cited in testimony
Series opens · Post 1 of 4 Sub Verbis · Vera Post 2: The Bundle →

Blogger: The 1968 Gift — FSA Regulatory Enclosure Series · Post 4 of 4

The 1968 Gift — FSA Regulatory Enclosure Series · Post 4 of 4
The 1968 Gift  ·  FSA Regulatory Enclosure Series Post 4 of 4

The 1968 Gift

How a Single FAA Decision Turned Public Airspace Into a Private Asset Class — and Why You Pay for It Every Time You Fly

The Dubai Proof and the Reform That Never Comes

Dubai International became the world's busiest international airport without creating a billion-dollar private slot market. Slots at DXB are non-tradable government permissions. There is no $100 million slot pair at Dubai because there is no mechanism to accumulate that value. Every reform proposal for the American slot system — periodic auctions, stricter use-it-or-lose-it rules, airport-controlled allocation — has been proposed, litigated, lobbied against, and shelved. This post examines the counter-architecture Dubai built, the reform attempts the incumbents defeated, and what the 1968 gift costs in perpetuity.

Dubai International Airport handled approximately 88 million passengers in 2023, making it the world's busiest airport by international passenger volume. It operates two runways, serves over 90 airlines, and connects more than 240 destinations across six continents. It did this without creating a secondary market in runway access. It did this without distributing takeoff and landing rights to incumbents at no cost and watching them appreciate to nine figures. It did this, in short, without the 1968 gift.

The Dubai model is not a perfect counter-architecture. Emirates — the state-owned carrier — dominates DXB through government policy, preferential treatment, and massive public investment in aircraft and routes. Competition at DXB is asymmetric in ways that have drawn sustained criticism from European and American carriers who argue that state subsidies distort the global aviation market. The Dubai model trades one set of distortions for another.

What it does not produce is the specific distortion this series has documented: a government-created private asset class in public airspace access, accumulated by incumbents who paid nothing for the original allocation and have spent fifty-five years ensuring the allocation remains permanent. That specific harm — the 1968 gift and its compounding — is absent from the Dubai model. And its absence demonstrates that the harm is a choice, not a necessity.

"Dubai International is the world's busiest international airport. There is no $100 million slot pair at DXB. Slots are non-tradable government permissions. The world's busiest international airport was built without distributing public airspace access to incumbents as private property. The American system's specific distortion is a choice, not an engineering constraint." FSA Analysis · Post 4

How Dubai Did It Differently

The Dubai approach rests on three structural decisions that the American system made differently in 1968 and has never reversed.

First, slots at DXB are issued as revocable operating permissions by Dubai Airports — a government entity — not as tradable private property. An airline operating at DXB holds a permission to use the airport at specific times. It cannot sell that permission to another carrier for $75 million. It cannot lease it for revenue. It cannot bequeath it to a successor through merger at market value. When the permission is no longer needed, it returns to the authority, not to a secondary market. The permission is what the FAA said American slots were in 1968 — and then allowed to become something else in 1985.

Second, the Dubai government has used capacity expansion as its primary tool for managing airport congestion rather than cap-and-allocate. When DXB approached its capacity limits, the UAE built Al Maktoum International Airport — DWC — as a relief valve. Carriers that cannot access DXB at preferred times have an alternative. The expansion strategy keeps the scarcity value of any individual slot from reaching the levels that a hard cap with no relief valve produces. Congestion is managed through supply, not rationing.

Third, the government captures the value of airport access through landing fees, gate charges, and terminal services — mechanisms that allow public infrastructure investment to be recouped directly by the public entity that made it, rather than through the secondary market appreciation of rights given away for free. The economic rent that $100 million slot pairs represent at LaGuardia flows to Delta's or American's balance sheet. At DXB, the equivalent value flows to Dubai Airports' revenue, which funds further infrastructure investment.

None of these choices required a city-state governance model or sovereign wealth fund backing. They required only that the initial allocation decision — the moment when access rights are created and distributed — capture public value rather than transfer it. The FAA made the opposite choice in 1968. Dubai made the Dubai choice whenever it faced the same question. The results are visible in the transaction record: $100 million slot pairs at LaGuardia, zero at DXB.

The Reform Proposals: A Documented History of Failure

The argument that the American slot system should be reformed — through auctions, stricter utilization requirements, or airport-controlled allocation — is not new. It has been made by economists, consumer advocates, competing carriers, and occasionally by the FAA itself, in every decade since the 1985 Buy/Sell Rule created the secondary market. Every serious proposal has been defeated. The defeat record is the architecture's most instructive document.

Reform Attempt 1 — New York Slot Auctions, 2008–2009
"The FAA should auction slots at JFK, LaGuardia, and Newark rather than grandfathering them to incumbents. An auction would capture public value, improve efficiency, and create genuine competitive access for new entrants."
The FAA proposed auction rules for New York area airports in 2008. Incumbent carriers — led by American, Delta, and United — challenged the rules in federal court and mounted an aggressive lobbying campaign in Congress. The auctions were never implemented. The legal challenges, combined with the change in administration in 2009, produced regulatory withdrawal. The slots remained with their incumbent holders. The public captured nothing.
Reform Attempt 2 — Stricter Use-It-or-Lose-It Enforcement
"The 80% utilization rule should be tightened and more aggressively enforced to prevent incumbents from holding slots primarily to block competitors rather than to serve passengers."
Periodic FAA proposals to tighten the utilization threshold or close the scheduling loopholes that allow suboptimal service to satisfy the 80% requirement have consistently encountered incumbent resistance. The FAA has issued waivers — most recently extending relaxed utilization requirements through October 2026 due to air traffic control staffing shortages — that effectively reward incumbents for holding slots even during periods of reduced operations. The use-it-or-lose-it rule that was meant to prevent hoarding has, in practice, been administered with sufficient flexibility to allow strategic retention.
Reform Attempt 3 — Airport-Controlled Allocation
"Slot authority should be transferred from the FAA to airport operators — the Port Authority at LaGuardia and JFK, the Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority at Reagan National — who could auction, lease, or allocate slots in ways that capture value for public infrastructure rather than for incumbent airlines."
This proposal, advanced by aviation economists and some consumer advocates, would replicate the approach used at some European airports where the airport authority plays a more direct role in slot management. Incumbent carriers oppose it vigorously, on the basis that their slot holdings represent property rights that cannot be transferred to another authority without compensation. The legal status of slots as property — which the FAA has always maintained is contested — becomes the defense against any mechanism that would allow the public entity that owns the infrastructure to capture its access value.
Reform Attempt 4 — Merger Divestiture as Forced Reform
"When airline mergers produce dangerous slot concentration, the DOJ should require divestitures that genuinely open markets to new entrants, not merely transfer slot holdings from one incumbent to another."
The 2013 American/US Airways merger divestitures were the most significant forced redistribution of slot holdings in the system's history. Southwest and Virgin America received slots at LaGuardia and Reagan National that had previously been consolidated in the merged carrier. The result was modest competitive improvement at both airports — Southwest established a meaningful if constrained presence, fares on some routes declined. But the divestitures addressed the concentration produced by one specific merger, not the structural concentration inherited from 1968. The incumbents who sold slots received $425 million. The public received a fractional improvement in competition at two airports. The architecture remained intact.

Why Reform Fails: The Incumbents' Defense

The pattern of reform failure is not accidental. It reflects the same structural dynamic this series has documented in every other regulatory enclosure architecture: the incumbents who received the original gift have vastly more organized interest in preserving it than the diffuse population of passengers who would benefit from reform.

American, Delta, and United each hold slot portfolios worth hundreds of millions of dollars at current market values. Each employs lobbyists, maintains relationships with members of Congress whose constituents depend on airline service, and has the legal resources to challenge any regulatory action that threatens those holdings in federal court. The Association of Airlines, IATA, and airline-aligned congressional caucuses provide coalition reinforcement. The legal argument — that slots have been treated as property for forty years and cannot be reallocated without Fifth Amendment compensation — provides a constitutional backstop against any regulatory attempt to recover the 1968 gift for the public.

The passengers who would benefit from competitive entry at LaGuardia and Reagan National are not organized. They do not maintain relationships with FAA administrators. They do not file comments in aviation rulemaking proceedings. They pay the fare premium embedded in every ticket on a slot-constrained route and have no mechanism to direct that payment toward the reform that would reduce it. The political economy of the slot system produces exactly the outcome that public choice theory predicts: concentrated, organized interests defeat diffuse, unorganized ones, and the original gift compounds for another decade.

"The incumbents hold slot portfolios worth hundreds of millions. They lobby, litigate, and organize. The passengers who would benefit from reform pay the fare premium embedded in every ticket and have no mechanism to direct that payment toward change. The political economy is not a failure of the system. It is the system working exactly as concentrated interests design it to work." FSA Analysis · Post 4

The Perimeter Rule: Congress as Incumbent Defender

Reagan National's perimeter rule — which restricts most flights to origins within approximately 1,250 miles — adds a layer of congressional involvement in the slot system's preservation that the LaGuardia situation does not fully capture. The perimeter rule is not an FAA administrative rule. It is a statutory restriction, embedded in federal law through the work of Virginia and Maryland congressional delegations who have historically fought to maintain Reagan National's short-haul focus as a convenience for members of Congress and their staffs.

Periodic proposals to add transcontinental slots at DCA — expanding service beyond the perimeter — have produced some limited exceptions but have consistently encountered resistance from the airport's congressional protectors. The members who most value convenient nonstop service to their home districts are also the members best positioned to protect the slot system that makes that service possible. Congressional self-interest and incumbent airline interest align precisely at Reagan National in a way that makes the perimeter rule among the most durable elements of the slot architecture.

The 2024 FAA Reauthorization Act added a small number of additional slots at DCA — a incremental concession to competitive pressure — without disturbing the perimeter rule or the grandfathered holdings of the dominant carriers. Reform came in the form of a margin note rather than structural change. The architecture absorbed the pressure and remained.

What This Series Has Established

Four posts have traced the 1968 gift from its administrative origin through its asset class valuation, its parallel in the taxi medallion system, and the reform arc that has consistently failed to recover public value from a public resource given away fifty-five years ago.

The High Density Rule created artificial scarcity from public airspace. The 1985 Buy/Sell Rule converted that scarcity into tradable private property. Decades of merger and acquisition concentrated those holdings in three carriers whose slot portfolios are worth billions — entirely traceable to an administrative decision that cost the original recipients nothing. The 2013 merger divestitures produced $425 million in proceeds for American Airlines from the sale of a fraction of those holdings. The public received nothing from the original allocation. Reform proposals have been proposed and defeated in every decade since 1985. The 2008 auction attempt failed to litigation and lobbying. Use-it-or-lose-it enforcement has been administered with structural flexibility. Airport-controlled allocation remains a theoretical proposal. Congressional interests defend the perimeter rule at DCA.

Dubai built the world's busiest international airport without any of this. Slots are non-tradable permissions. The government captures access value through fees, not through watching incumbents sell public resources to each other at nine-figure prices. The capacity constraint that makes American slots valuable was managed through expansion rather than rationing. The 1968 gift does not exist at DXB because no one gave it.

The gate board in the image at the top of this series reads: New York, 6:25 AM, $129. There is no plane at the gate. The jetway hangs empty in the predawn dark. The slot that controls access to that gate was given away in 1968 and is worth $100 million today. The $129 fare reflects a market constrained by that gift. The empty gate is public infrastructure. The right to use it is private property.

That is the 1968 gift. It has been compounding for fifty-five years. No one has asked for it back.

FSA Series Certification — Complete · The 1968 Gift
P1
The Decision — Verified High Density Rule 1968: slot caps at LGA, JFK, ORD, DCA; incumbent allocation; no auction. Buy/Sell Rule 1985: secondary market authorized. Deregulation Act 1978: market opened nationally; slot system preserved. Two-instrument architecture named and sourced.
P2
The Asset Class — Verified LGA slot pair $75M–$100M; DCA $60M; American merger divestitures $425M+. Heathrow BA 40–52%; Frankfurt Lufthansa 65%. Newark fare reduction 2.5% on slot relaxation. Southwest constraint at LGA documented. Hoarding mechanism verified.
P3
The Medallion Parallel — Verified Haas Act 1937 founding instrument. Medallion peak $1.3M (2013); collapse 80–90%+ post-Uber. Bypass asymmetry: app-dispatch escaped street-hail scope; runway physically irreplaceable. Pattern across spectrum, fishing quotas, Heathrow documented.
P4
The Dubai Proof and Reform Failure — Verified Dubai: non-tradable permissions, capacity expansion, public fee capture — no secondary market. Reform attempts: 2008–2009 auction (failed to litigation/lobbying); use-it-or-lose-it (flexibility administered for incumbents); airport-controlled allocation (property rights defense); merger divestitures (partial, one-time). DCA perimeter rule: congressional self-interest alignment documented.
FSA Wall · Post 4 · Series Level

The total aggregate value of all slots currently held by American, Delta, and United at LaGuardia, JFK, and Reagan National — the complete present value of the 1968 gift as it exists in 2026 — is not disclosed in any public filing and has not been calculated in any accessible academic or policy source. The wall runs at that calculation.

The internal FAA and DOT deliberations on the 2008–2009 New York slot auction proposals — why they were ultimately withdrawn, what specific legal arguments prevailed, and what communications occurred between agency officials and incumbent airline representatives — are not available in publicly accessible records reviewed for this series. The outcome is documented; the interior of the defeat is not.

The future regulatory trajectory of the slot system under the current FAA administration — including the October 2026 expiration of the current use-it-or-lose-it waiver and any subsequent rulemaking — is live and unresolved. Whether the waiver is extended, tightened, or converted into permanent rule change is unknown. That question is the architecture's nearest open node.

Whether the legal argument that slots constitute Fifth Amendment property — which has been asserted by incumbent carriers in resisting allocation reform — would survive a direct constitutional challenge has never been definitively adjudicated. The property rights claim is the incumbents' most durable defense instrument. Its constitutional validity remains untested at the Supreme Court level.

Primary Sources · Post 4

  1. Dubai Airports — DXB operational statistics; passenger volume documentation; slot allocation framework
  2. Dubai Airports / GCAA — slot permission structure; non-tradable characterization; government ownership
  3. FAA Notice of Proposed Rulemaking — New York area slot auctions, 2008; Federal Register Vol. 73
  4. FAA withdrawal of New York slot auction rules, 2009 — agency docket and press reporting
  5. Incumbent airline legal challenges to FAA auction proposals — federal court filings, 2008–2009
  6. FAA use-it-or-lose-it waiver history — LGA, JFK, DCA; extension through October 2026
  7. American/US Airways merger DOJ consent decree — slot divestitures; competitive impact assessment, 2013–2014
  8. DCA perimeter rule — 49 U.S.C. §49109; congressional amendment history
  9. FAA Reauthorization Act 2024 — DCA slot additions; perimeter rule retention
  10. Association of Value Airlines — competitive access advocacy; slot reform filings
  11. IATA Worldwide Airport Slot Guidelines — grandfathering framework; new entrant priority rules
  12. Aviation economics literature: Borenstein, "Hubs and High Fares" (1989); subsequent fare premium studies on slot-controlled airports
← Post 3: The Medallion Parallel Sub Verbis · Vera Series complete