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Main Author: Hoffert, Barbara
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Language:en
Published: 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ832371
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author Hoffert, Barbara
author_facet Hoffert, Barbara
Hoffert, Barbara
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents Book Buying Survey 2009: "It's the Economy" Hoffert, Barbara Taxes Public Libraries Library Services Surveys Economic Impact Budgets Economics Retrenchment Budgeting Library Materials This article reports on "LJ"'s annual book-buying survey of public libraries in which circulation took the biggest leap recorded since the survey was launched in 1999. This year's whopping 5.16 percent increase overall suggests just how many people are saving pennies by borrowing materials instead of buying them. In fact, libraries are being swamped; nearly eight in ten respondents report increased circulation. In this regard, at least, the library business is booming. With industries collapsing, tax revenues shrinking, and jobs, stock prices, and consumer spending in freefall, libraries know that retrenchment is just around the corner. Fully seven in ten of this year's respondents anticipate budget cuts in the forthcoming year, and they're already making plans. Many of "LJ"'s respondents report that they expect to be more selective than ever about book purchases in the coming year, trimming fringe and even mid-tier titles while focusing on what users really want. Those hoping to keep some breadth in the collection are looking to work with other systems. For the first time ever in this survey, a small percent of respondents say that they manage budget cuts by maintaining collaborative collections.
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_EJ832371
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2009
record_format eric
spellingShingle Book Buying Survey 2009: "It's the Economy"
Hoffert, Barbara
Taxes
Public Libraries
Library Services
Surveys
Economic Impact
Budgets
Economics
Retrenchment
Budgeting
Library Materials
Book Buying Survey 2009: "It's the Economy" Hoffert, Barbara Taxes Public Libraries Library Services Surveys Economic Impact Budgets Economics Retrenchment Budgeting Library Materials This article reports on "LJ"'s annual book-buying survey of public libraries in which circulation took the biggest leap recorded since the survey was launched in 1999. This year's whopping 5.16 percent increase overall suggests just how many people are saving pennies by borrowing materials instead of buying them. In fact, libraries are being swamped; nearly eight in ten respondents report increased circulation. In this regard, at least, the library business is booming. With industries collapsing, tax revenues shrinking, and jobs, stock prices, and consumer spending in freefall, libraries know that retrenchment is just around the corner. Fully seven in ten of this year's respondents anticipate budget cuts in the forthcoming year, and they're already making plans. Many of "LJ"'s respondents report that they expect to be more selective than ever about book purchases in the coming year, trimming fringe and even mid-tier titles while focusing on what users really want. Those hoping to keep some breadth in the collection are looking to work with other systems. For the first time ever in this survey, a small percent of respondents say that they manage budget cuts by maintaining collaborative collections.
title Book Buying Survey 2009: "It's the Economy"
topic Taxes
Public Libraries
Library Services
Surveys
Economic Impact
Budgets
Economics
Retrenchment
Budgeting
Library Materials
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ832371