http://www.newrepublic.com/article/119769/amazons-monopoly-must-be-broken-radical-plan-tech-giant
So, no matter how large they grow, publishers will continue to strip away costs to satisfy Amazon. And more attention will fall on a strange inefficiency at the heart of the business: the advances that publishing houses pay their writers. This upfront money is the economic pillar on which quality books rest, the great bulwark against dilettantism. Advances make it financially viable for a writer to commit years of work to a project.
But no bank or investor in its right mind would extend that kind of credit to an author, save perhaps Stephen King. Which means that it wont take much for this anomalous ecosystem to collapse. Amazon might decide that it can only generate enough revenue by further transforming the e-book marketand it might try to drive sales by deflating Salman Rushdie and Jennifer Egan novels to the price of a Diet Coke.
Personally, I think the article misses one big point. The publishers themselves were a form of monopoly.
As an author, you couldn't just go to a publisher, say "I have a book" and expect to be published. You'd be rejected. Then you would go convince an agent to represent you (another middle man who takes a fee) and you might get your book looked at by a publisher. They might reject you again, or they might take you on, but you're not getting a great royalty rate.
Publishers should be free to sell at whatever wholesale rates they choose.
And stores, like Amazon, should be free to decide what retail price they are going to sell at.
If a wholesale price is too high to make it worth stocking, then Amazon (or any other store) should have the right to decline to carry it.
Self-publishing takes away a lot of the old barriers and allows anyone to publish. It also means that everyone has to compete on quality and not just what is deemed worthy by the publishers.
I don't like what Amazon is doing with publishers and authors. I don't know if it is directly correlated to Amazon but author salaries have actually dropped in recent years. Yes the top guys still make bank but there are a number of published and well sold authors who still hold day jobs.
Amazon is simply telling publishers to take their demand to set retail prices and take a hike.
In many ways, it is just like what happened in the music industry. Publishers are the "old guard" that determined what got published and what was popular, simply because they limited the flow and the barrier to entry was otherwise out of reach.
If you are an individual (or even a small company), self publishing and printing a book is easy. Distributing that (and getting stores to carry it) without a publisher used to be DAMN HARD. It was akin to being an indie music artist. Sure, you could press CDs, but good luck getting a major store to carry them if you didn't have a big label behind you.
Now, self-publishing and getting "shelf space" on one of the largest bookstores on the planet is within reach of anyone.
As a writer, I'm constantly faced with the devaluing of my own industry based on pennies-per-word payment schemes and the lowering of quality as a result. People just want content, and whether or not it's good is meaningless. A world with cheap books is great, but a world without publishers is a world without standards.
I'm also a writer, but I put the blame on the "pennies-per-word payment schemes" on the Internet blog content farms.
I disagree with you on publishers though. Publishers will always be around, but there is nothing wrong with have an easy way for independents to self-publish.
The argument you're using is the exact same argument that Nintendo used back in the NES days when it set prices for game carts and only allowed approved titles. The courts saw it differently, and stores were allowed to set their own prices.
Publishers can remain relevant and benefit the whole market, but to do so they need to evolve. But instead they want to reverse the clock to 60s. If they aren't willing to evolve they deserve to go extinct. Of course, in reality all those publishers are making a killing, they're just crying because they want to make even more and hate competition from indie authors.
I agree with this, the publishing model needs to evolve. The music industry tried to hold onto the old ways too long and, as a result, the transition was rough. Publishers who adapt and move forward with new ways to better serve authors will survive and flourish. Publishers who try to stubbornly keep to the old ways will please the "old guard" of authors, but will ultimately have a hard time of it as the market evolves.
What evidence are you using that Amazon provides that and publishers don't? Amazon is overcrowding the market and undervaluing authors.
Amazon is opening up the market by lowering the barrier to entry.
Does this mean there will be more chaff? Sure. There are a lot of crappy writers out there. But what is wrong with letting them self-publish and letting the market decide?
Just like with movies, what you or I might think is crap might be enjoyable entertainment fare to someone else. And the opposite may be true as well.
Good writers will be able to sell their books (physical or digital) at whatever price they want (wholesale if selling to stores, retail is self-publishing and selling direct to readers).
Poor writers will find that they won't get the sales they need and they will either need to improve their craft or, as you say, keep a primary job while writing as a hobby.