All Party Parliamentary Group on Publishing

Promoting the publishing industry

 
         
 
All Party Parliamentary Group on Publishing
 

Contact us:

Mr Gordon Banks MP
House of Commons
London
SW1A OAA

Telephone 020 7219 8275

 

All Party Parliamentary Group on Publishing

The All Party Parliamentary Group on Publishing aims to promote the publishing industry and discuss issues challenging this sector and bring them to the attention of government.

Publishing in the UK is the largest media sector, and the biggest creative industry. In its quality, diversity and reach, UK publishing leads the world.

Book, journal and electronic publishing contribute over £5 billion to the domestic economy and since 2004 sales of books have increased by 13 per cent. Every year, 120,000 new books are published in the UK and in 2008, UK publishers sold 855 million books around the world. The value of UK book exports is higher than the export turnover of any other creative industry. In fact, the UK exports more than any other publishing industry in the world. The export value of books to the British economy in 2008 was £1.1 billion, a 26 per cent increase on 2004. The UK publishing sector directly employs hundreds of thousands of people and is one of the most diverse in the world – from multi-national businesses to specialist academic publishers and small independents.

Publishers are risk-takers and investors. Their shared mission is to make content available, and to ensure, through constant innovation, that it is accessible to wider and wider audiences. Their skill in finding and supporting talent underpins the UK’s cultural diversity: British books inspire plays, musicals, films and television shows. The UK’s publishing sector also leads the world in educational and academic resources, facilitating government literacy and numeracy policies and equipping the next generation with the skills they need in the 21st century. Educational, academic and professional books define the UK’s status as a world-class centre for education and research, and drive scientific progress.

Copyright protects the value of this creativity, innovation and originality. Creators need financial returns to survive, and publishers and authors depend on being able to protect their content so that writing, illustrating and publishing can remain commercially and creatively viable. Eight per cent of all economic activity in the UK is generated by industries which depend on the copyright framework for their continued success. Together they create millions of jobs. The UK owes its position as the largest exporting publishing industry in the world to our strong copyright laws. Copyright must be the bedrock on which the digital economy is built: it gives authors and publishers the confidence to make their material accessible in the first place. But if the principles of copyright are undermined, it will drive creativity into decline, meaning there will be less original content for us all to enjoy.