Students Find $100 Textbooks Cost $50, Purchased Overseas

October 21, 2003
  By TAMAR LEWIN


Richard Sarkis and David Kinsley were juniors at Williams
College, surfing the net for a cheap source for their
economics textbook, when they discovered a little known
economic fact: the very same college textbooks used in the
United States sell for half price - or less - in England.

Just like prescription drugs, textbooks cost far less
overseas than they do in the United States. The publishing
industry defends its pricing policies, saying that foreign
sales would be impossible if book prices were not pegged to
local market conditions.

But many Americans do not see it that way. The National
Association of College Stores has written to all the
leading publishers asking them to end a practice they see
as an unfair to American students.

"We think it's frightening, and it's wrong, that the same
American textbooks our stores buy here for $100 can be
shipped in from some other country for $50," said Laura
Nakoneczny, a spokeswoman for the association. "It
represents price-gouging of the American public generally
and college students in particular."

But thanks to the Internet, more and more individual
students and college bookstores are starting to order
textbooks from abroad - and a few entrepreneurs, including
Mr. Sarkis and his friends, have begun what are essentially
arbitrage businesses to exploit the price differentials.

"We couldn't understand why what costs $120 here should
cost $50-something there," said Mr. Sarkis, who, with Mr.
Kinsley and another classmate, has spent three years
building a Web-based company, BookCentral.com, selling
textbooks from abroad to students in the United States. "It
seemed so sleazy of the publishers. We were sure that
college students would be shocked and outraged if they knew
about the foreign prices. But it's been this big secret."

That is changing, though. To the despair of the textbook
publishers who are still trying to block such sales, the
reimporting of American texts from overseas has become far
easier in recent years, thanks both to Internet sites that
offer instant access to foreign book prices, and to a 1998
Supreme Court ruling that federal copyright law does not
protect American manufacturers from having the products
they arranged to sell overseas at a discount shipped back
for sale in the United States.

Before the Supreme Court decision, Americans could not take
advantage of the discounts abroad without violating the
copyright law.

Now, however, "gray market" sales are taking off on
campuses.

At one prestigious university, a sophomore imported 30
biology books from England this fall and sold them outside
his classroom for less than the campus-bookstore price,
netting a $1,200 profit. Next semester, if all goes well,
he plans to expand the operation.

"The only difference is that they say `international
edition' in little print on the cover," said the student,
who added that he was not certain whether his project
raised any legal issues, and therefore asked that neither
he nor his college be identified.

At other colleges, Asian students have banded together to
take advantage of textbook prices in Taiwan, Singapore and
Malaysia, which are even lower than those in Europe.

Many students, individually, have begun to compare the
textbook prices posted on American sites like Amazon.com,
with the lower prices for the same books on foreign sites
like Amazon.co.uk.

The differences are often significant: "Lehninger
Principles of Biochemistry, Third Edition," for example,
lists for $146.15 on the American Amazon site, but can be
had for $63.48, plus $8.05 shipping, from the British one.
And "Linear System Theory and Design, Third Edition" is
$110 in the United States, but $41.76, or $49.81 with
shipping, in Britain.

Many college bookstores, meanwhile, have taken matters into
their own hands, arranging their own overseas purchases.

"I buy from Amazon.co.uk and from sources in the Far East,
and I knew more and more students were doing the same
thing, individually," said Tom Frey, owner of the
University Bookstore at Purdue University, who sells the
new books from overseas at the same price as a used
American book. "Then this fall, for the first time, the Fed
Ex man told me that the students at the Indian Association
here at Purdue had just gotten a delivery of 14 skids of
books, about 50 books each, from India. I think I'm losing
about 10 percent of my sales to overseas books."

Relations between textbook publishers and college
booksellers have been seriously roiled by the issue.

"This has become a very hot issue since last year, when it
just seemed to explode all of a sudden," said Ms.
Nakoneczny, of the college store association. The
association's letter to the publishers warned that the
pricing structure might be an antitrust violation. "The
sale of identical books to foreign buyers at prices
significantly lower than to domestic buyers, while publicly
stating that domestic prices are due to high costs, could
constitute an unfair or deceptive act," the letter said.
While there is no longer protection in the federal
copyright law for the pricing differentials, the major
publishers are still trying to stop the reimporting of
texts priced for foreign markets, mostly through contract
language forbidding foreign wholesalers to sell to American
distributors. Some have placed stickers on covers, saying
"International Edition RESTRICTED Not for Sale in North
America" or added the cover line "International Student
Edition."

None of the three major textbook publishers - Pearson,
McGraw Hill, and Thomson - would discuss why overseas
prices are so much lower than domestic ones, referring all
questions to Allen Adler, the lawyer for the American
Association of Publishers.

"This is a season when textbook publishers get kicked
around a lot, and they're feeling vulnerable," Mr. Adler
said. "The practice of selling U.S. products abroad at
prices keyed to the local market is longstanding. It's not
unusual, it doesn't violate public policy and it's
certainly not illegal. But publishers are still coming to
terms with the dramatic change in the law."

Mr. Adler contends that foreign textbook prices are pegged
to the per capita income and economic conditions of the
destination countries - and that foreign sales are a boon
to America's standing in the world, to foreign students
seeking an American-quality education, and even to American
consumers, since each extra copy sold overseas, even at a
low price, helps to spread the high costs of putting out a
new textbook.

As more and more customers turn to reimporting books, it is
an open question how long the overseas price differentials
will last.

"We buy from the U.K., France, Israel and the Far East,"
said Bob Crabb of the University of Minnesota Bookstores.
"As long as the publishers are offering books at less than
half the price that's available here, we'll take advantage
of it. It's great for students. For publishers, the
marginal costs of printing a few extra books and selling
them overseas are very, very low. But I would guess that
shortly, the sales here will begin eating into their U.S.
sales in a serious way."

Disgruntlement over textbook costs has been growing in the
United States as prices have risen. Last month, Senator
Charles E. Schumer, Democrat of New York, announced that
the average New York college freshman and sophomore spends
more than $900 a year on texts - 41 percent more than in
1998 - and proposed a plan to make $1,000 of textbook costs
tax deductible. The same week, University of Wisconsin
students demonstrated against high textbook prices and in
favor of creating a textbook rental system.

To be sure, textbook costs, however high, are only the
final straw for American college students, whose tuition
costs and fees have been rising rapidly. At Williams and
other elite universities, for example, tuition, room and
board now tops $35,000 a year. In Britain, though, the cost
of tuition is largely borne by the government and students
pay much less.

For example, tuition alone for undergraduates at Harvard is
currently $26,066 a year as compared with $1,840 at Oxford
University.

In the United States, one in five students does not buy all
the required texts. And more and more, like Mr. Sarkis and
Mr. Kinsley, are willing to go to great lengths for a
cheaper alternative. "I got mad when I found out that our
labor economics book was something like $90," said Mr.
Kinsley, who, like Mr. Sarkis, graduated in 2001. "I didn't
think I would read $90 worth in it, so I was determined to
find something cheaper, and I spent five hours searching on
the Web."

Mr. Sarkis said Williams's campus bookstore made the high
costs all too visible. "They really rubbed it in," he said.
"If you were the highest spender of the day, they'd ring
this little bell and say they had a new winner, and give
you a lollipop. I got the lollipop twice."

http://www.nytimes.com/2003/10/21/education/ 
21BOOK.html?ex=1067736867&ei=1&en=bce063b9fa33710f

----------------------------------------
May L. Lugemwa
Harvard College, Class of '04

Now, on the road to freedom, I was pausing for a moment �
could hear the voice of the water that had taught me to sing.
-Pablo Neruda


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