Daily Bulletin

Men's Weekly

.

  • Written by Rebecca Giblin, ARC Future Fellow; Associate Professor, Monash University
Five ways to boost Australian writers’ earnings

Who makes the money in publishing? Nobody. This often repeated dark joke highlights a serious issue. The most recent figures show that Australian authors earn just $12,900 a year from writing work (the median, at $2,800, was even worse). Indeed, authors can gross less than $5,000 for Miles Franklin-nominated titles that took two or more years to write.

Fixing this isn’t as simple as reaching more deeply into publisher pockets, because most of those are empty too. While the major international houses are thriving (Simon & Schuster and Penguin Random House recently reported 16% profits), publishing Australian stories can be financially perilous.

In independent publishing, 10% of the book sale goes to the author, perhaps another 10% to the printer, and up to a whopping 70% for distribution. What’s left has to pay the publisher, editor, marketers, admin staff and keep the lights on.

But we can improve our approach to author rights. Here are five lessons we can learn from elsewhere to help Australian writers earn more money.

Read more: Scrounging for money: how the world's great writers made a living

#1: Give authors stronger out of print rights

Traditionally, contractual “out of print” clauses have let authors reclaim their rights when a print run has sold out and the publisher doesn’t want to invest in another. But in our recent analysis of almost 150 contracts in the Australian Society of Authors archive, we found 85% of contracts with these clauses allowed authors to reclaim their rights only when the book was “not available in any edition”.

These days, books can be kept available (at least digitally or via print-on-demand) forever - but that doesn’t mean their publishers are still actively promoting them.

A better approach is to allow authors to reclaim their rights towards the end of a work’s commercial life, determined with reference to objective criteria like the number of copies sold or royalties earned in the previous year. The Australian Society of Authors recommends authors only sign contracts that have this meaningful kind of out-of-print clause - but many publishers still try to get authors to sign up to unacceptable terms.

Read more: How to read the Australian book industry in a time of change

A growing number of countries (including France, Romania, Slovenia, Spain, Macedonia and Brazil mandate author rights based on objective criteria. The French law is an interesting model. There, authors can get their rights back if a book has been published for at least four years, and they haven’t been credited royalties for at least two. This opens up new possibilities for the author to license it to another publisher, or even sell it directly to libraries or consumers.

Rebecca Giblin on the problems with publishing contracts and the case for new author rights.

#2: ‘Use it or lose it’: return author rights when they’re not being used

Publishers take very broad rights to most books: in our recent archival analysis we found 83% took worldwide rights, and 43% took rights in all languages. It’s easy to take rights - but if publishers do so, they should be obliged to either use them or give them back.

To that end we can learn from the “use it or lose it” laws that bind publishers in some parts of Europe. In Spain and Lithuania, for example, authors can get their rights back for languages that are still unexploited after five years.

#3: Introduce a ‘bestseller’ clause to contracts

Of course, it’s not always the case that there’s no money in publishing: sometimes a title that was expected to sell 5,000 copies sells 5,000,000. That changes the economics enormously: but in many cases, the contract only provides the same old 10% revenue for the author. For works that achieve unexpected success, we can learn from Germany and the Netherlands (and the proposed new EU copyright law). They have “bestseller” clauses that give authors the right to share fairly in unexpected windfalls arising from their work.

#4: Legally enshrine the right to fair payment

Even where there’s not much money to be made, the author should still receive a fair share. Again, Germany and the Netherlands lead the way on this. There, authors are entitled to “fair” or “equitable” payment for their work - and can enforce those rights if their pay is too low.

These laws don’t set a dollar amount, since what is “fair” depends on all the circumstances. However, such laws at least provide a minimum floor. If the contracted amount is unfair or inequitable, authors have a legal right to redress.

#5: Put time limits on transfers

In Australia, copyright lasts for the life of the author, and then another 70 years after that. Publishers almost always take rights for that full term - only 3% of the contracts between publishers and authors we looked at took less. But publishers don’t need that long to recoup their investments. In the US, authors can reclaim their rights from intermediaries 35 years after they licensed or transferred them.

In Canada, copyrights transfer automatically to heirs 25 years after an author dies. We used to have the same law in Australia, but it was abolished for spurious reasons about 50 years ago. If we reintroduced a similar time limit on transfers, it would open up new opportunities for authors and their heirs (for example, to license or sell to a different publisher, libraries or direct to the public).

It’s true that there’s often not much money in publishing. But by changing our approach to author rights, we can help writers earn more and make Australian books more freely available.

Authors: Rebecca Giblin, ARC Future Fellow; Associate Professor, Monash University

Read more http://theconversation.com/five-ways-to-boost-australian-writers-earnings-110694

Business News

Robot Trading and Automation: Does Automated Trading Really Work?

In today’s fast-moving financial markets, many new and experienced traders wonder whether automated trading systems — often called trading robots, expert advisors (EAs), or algorithmic bots — can real...

Daily Bulletin - avatar Daily Bulletin

Physical retail roars back: Christmas 2025 expected to be the biggest in years

Physical retail is back and it’s booming. Shopping centres across Australia are preparing for one of the biggest Christmas and Boxing Day sale seasons on record, driven by strong consumer confidence...

Daily Bulletin - avatar Daily Bulletin

Groundbreaking investment positions Agile Energy to slash power costs for Australian businesses and accelerate Australia’s rise as a green economic powerhouse

Agile Energy is now positioned to play a defining role in reducing energy costs for Australian businesses and fast-tracking the nation’s transformation into a globally competitive green economic pow...

Daily Bulletin - avatar Daily Bulletin

Speed Dating For Business
hacklink hack forum hacklink film izle hacklink หวยออนไลน์jojobetสล็อตเว็บตรงgamdom girişpadişahbetMostbetenjoybetkavbetcarros usadospin updizipalStreameastholiganbet girişkiralık hackercocktail glassesultrabetjojobet girişDeneme Bonusu Veren Sitelervaycasino girişjojobet girişpradabetGrandpashabetjojobetjojobetjojobetholiganbet色情casibomnakitbahisholiganbetjojobet girişjojobet girişJojobet Girişyakabet1xbet girişjojobetgrandpashabet girişgobahisbetofficeenjoybetmadridbetcasibom girişgiftcardmall/mygiftultrabet girişcasinolevantmatadorbetbets10kingbettingmeritkingcasibom girişkingroyalcasinopercasibomcasino sitelericasibomJojobetmeritkingmeritkingPorno İzlecasibom girişkolaybetmeritkingbetoviscasibomcasibom girişmasterbettingmasterbettingyakabetartemisbetbetpuankingroyalbetnanodinamobetbetnanovdcasinoSekabet girişmarsbahis girişbetkolikultrabet güncel girişbetsmovekingroyalbetsmovemeritkingmeritkingyakabetyakabetyakabetjojobetrinabetmasterbettingsahabet girişaertyerCasibomcolor pickermavibetenjoybetligobet girişcolor pickerholiganbet girişholiganbet girişmavibetmavibetmavibetholiganbetcratosslot girişคลิปหลุดไทยCasibomCasibomholiganbetdeneme bonusu veren sitelerMavibetonwin girişonwindiyarbakır escortultrabeteskişehir escortultrabetjojobet girişmarsbahisbahsegelcasibomgrandbettinggrandbetting girişcasibom girişholiganbethttps://carrworld.combets10matbetcasibomRoyal Reelsroyal reelskolaybetKayseri Escortjojobet girişjojobetnilüfer escortNişantaşı EscortbetvolebetvolebettiltStreameastcasibomKalebetpadişahbetfixbetaviator gamesetrabettimebettimebettimebetbahisoistanbul escort telegramcasibombetparkcasibom girişcrown155hb88super96jojobetultrabetcasibomstreameast한국야동av한글자막meritkingสล็อตpornopadişahbetBetigmabetparkBetigmaBetlora girişgiftcardmall/mygiftgaziantep escortspin2uneoaus96padişahbetjojobetmarsbahisjojobetcasibombets10ffpokiesjojobetbest australia online casino 2026best payid casino australiaholiganbetjojobetBetist girişxslotmostbetjojobetdaftar situs judi slot gacor hb88 indonesiaJojobet 1114mostbetmostbetgalabetkingroyalbahis siteleri 2025matadorbetMalware downloadcasinowon girişjojobetjojobetwww.giftcardmall.com/mygiftjojobetgrandpashabetcasibom girişcasibomgiftcardmall/mygiftsadfasdfsdfasdasdasdasdkonya escortjojobetroyalbetnilüfer escortpin up uzbekistanSlot Heart Casinocasinomedklarna.seholiganbetCasibom Girişwww.mcgift.giftcardmall.com balancewww.mcgift.giftcardmall.com balancegiftcardmall/mygiftwww.giftcardmall.com/mygift activatetm menards loginsweet bonanzaceltabetkingbettingbetasusstake payid casino australiabest payid casino in australiaholiganbetcanlı maç izlebetpashttps://vozolturkiyedistributoru.com/casibomcasibomcratosroyalbetci girişjojobet girişcasibomwolf winnerWolf Winnercasibomdeneme bonusu veren sitelerjokerbetmatbetholiganbetvdcasinomeritkingssitus slot gacorJojobetgoogle hit botuCasibomdizipalrealbahisrealbahisperabetperabetmeritkingbetwoonjojobetGanobetcasibom