A Kindle in every pot
Jan. 28th, 2009 02:31 pmAn interesting short article in
AmericaBlog:
"You see, in Greece, the government pays for 99% of students' books. So, Papandreou argues, why not give the kids every book in existence for a hundred bucks (or $360 in the case of the Kindle)."
Think if they did that in the States. Or worldwide. How many school-aged kids are there anyway?
I can see the methods for calculating advances and royalties might be revisited...
AmericaBlog:
"You see, in Greece, the government pays for 99% of students' books. So, Papandreou argues, why not give the kids every book in existence for a hundred bucks (or $360 in the case of the Kindle)."
Think if they did that in the States. Or worldwide. How many school-aged kids are there anyway?
I can see the methods for calculating advances and royalties might be revisited...
no subject
Date: 2009-01-28 09:33 pm (UTC)Adrianne
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Date: 2009-01-29 02:56 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-01-29 04:52 am (UTC)And what would it gain you? If every book sold tens of millions of copies, what would you get paid? A hundredth of a penny each? Certainly most individuals couldn't afford to pay a decent price for each book in the library of congress. And while the government could/has managed to do it once, they couldn't do it for every school kid in the country... The books would have to be heavily discounted, or even sent out for free.
A
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Date: 2009-01-29 05:29 am (UTC)I have no idea how to price these things.