Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

US textbook publisher merger collapses, pleasing colleges

- - P. Basken

Academic publishers McGraw-Hill and Cengage have abandoned their planned merger, cheering university groups that feared it would bring even higher textbook prices and slower moves toward digital alternativ­es.

The two US- based companies largely blamed their decision on heavy demands from the US Justice Department for a divestment of assets aimed at avoiding the concentrat­ion of assets that the universiti­es had feared.

The failed union is especially welcome, said Peter McPherson, president of the Associatio­n of Public and Land- grant Universiti­es, as higher education faces ever-growing pressures to translate technologi­es into more effective and less expensive ways of teaching.

“More providers in the marketplac­e will help ensure more students benefit from digital transforma­tion,” Mr McPherson said in a statement.

McGraw-Hill and Cengage, with just over 20 per cent of the academic textbook market apiece, are the two largest companies after UK-based Pearson Education, which has more than 40 per cent.

They announced their merger agreement in May 2019, while acknowledg­ing the possibilit­y of tough Justice Department requiremen­ts to sell off a large number of titles and materials in courses where they have competing offerings.

Representa­tives of universiti­es, students, campus bookstores and consumer advocacy groups quickly united in opposition to the merger, encouragin­g the department to take an aggressive position on consumer protection.

In its argument to the Justice Department, Mr McPherson’s group, the APLU, cited College Board data showing that US college students already pay an average of $1,240 (£995) a year on textbooks and supplies. Textbook prices alone have increased 184 per cent over the past two decades, triple the nation’s overall inflation rate, the APLU said.

At the same time, the APLU said, the higher education community has been slow to adopt new technologi­es. That may be partly because of educators wanting to be careful, the APLU acknowledg­ed, but also reflects a textbook industry far less driven than in other sectors to embrace digital innovation.

McGraw- Hill and Cengage said their boards unanimousl­y agreed to terminate their proposed merger. “The required divestitur­es would have made the merger uneconomic­al,” the chief executive officer of McGraw- Hill, Simon Allen, said in a statement.

Cengage, headquarte­red in Boston, emerged from federal bankruptcy protection in 2014. Its chief executive officer, Michael Hansen, said in a conference call with investors that the coronaviru­s pandemic created additional pressure to reconsider the merger and to concentrat­e more fully on helping colleges adjust to online instructio­n.

The proposed combined company had been promising an expansion of digital subscripti­ons in which students would get access to all 44,000 of their textbook titles for a single price.

Cengage said it made its existing digital subscripti­on plan free for the rest of the school year, reporting that more than 290,000 students signed up.

McGraw-Hill and Cengage, with just over 20 per cent of the academic textbook market apiece, are the two largest companies after UK-based Pearson Education, which has more than 40 per cent.

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