Prices can be as high as reader's $30 for reading a single article, or author's $1000 for removing a paywall from their article. I still have problem to believe these numbers.
Those numbers felt a bit high to me too, so I did a very quick search to find something suggesting why an article might cost a thousand-odd dollars. I found an old white paper from the Public Library of Science — it lists some costs that might help to explain why open access publication costs run to four figures.
PLoS reckoned that it might cost PLoS Biology $20 to manage each submitted manuscript given 100 submissions a month. Assuming only 1/10 of those get accepted, that leads to a $200 starting cost per published article.
Published articles also have production costs. For an 11-page article the paper guesstimates costs for:
These costs add up to $871, or $1071 after adding $200 for manuscript management. The manuscript management cost seems fair (I can easily picture an editor spending $20 worth of time per manuscript coordinating authors & reviewers), as do the first couple of line items. I'm less sure about the rest, but suspect that cost cutting would leave most of the $1000 price tag intact (and probably all of it if I factor in costs like office space, marketing, non-editorial staff & web hosting). I doubt this automatically justifies charging $30 to buy an already published article, though.
Thanks for the list of production costs; I did not realize all those parts were necessary. Now it makes more sense, though it still seems a bit exaggerated -- I mean, $700 just to proofread and convert one DOC file with pictures into XML + JPEG + PDF? That's a monthly salary of an educated person here in Eastern Europe. Let's be generous and pretend it is a week's work of one person. Sure, if you include office space, marketing, etc., then it grows... but why not use volunteer work instead? You could pay volunteers by giving them a free access into databas...
link
Razib Khan found this paragraph rather striking (who is reminded of this episode of South Park) and I would tend to agree that its a rather convincing argument.
Are publishers really so successful as rent seekers or is there something the original article is missing here? Also what useful strategies would LWers recommend to help minimize costs for someone trying to practice the virtue of scholarship? The obvious suggestions (implied in the article) seem to be emailing authors (and perhaps those suscribed) asking for the papers and acquiring and paying for membership in some libraries.
Another obvious option is using ... liberated databases of such academic papers.
Edit: Just wondering, has this been discussed before on Lesswrong?