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11 Nov 2009
Author: Graeme Klass
Australians will have to pay more for books:
Under current laws, retailers are not allowed to import and sell copies of a book if the local copyright holder has published the book here within 30 days of its overseas release. The Productivity Commission argues this restriction should be removed.
Federal cabinet was split on the push to reform the laws, with Competition Minister Craig Emerson, who was effectively rolled by the backbench, confirming today the government would not act on the Productivity Commission recommendations.
I read earlier about local authors putting pressure the government not to lift the restrictions. I find this puzzling. Authors create content. They (generally) do not actually physically publish the books themselves. It doesn’t matter where their content gets printed. The retort of “what about local jobs?”, well yes certain local book manufacturing jobs may be lost, but on the flipside, if books are cheaper, demand increases, thus creating an incentive for local authors and writers to seek publication.
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