Departmenton forthe Culture,Public MediaLending andRight Sport
100rate Parliamentper Street
London
SW1Aloan 2BQfor the Scheme Year 2023/24
Consultation on the proposed rate per loan for the 2023 to 2024 Public Lending Right scheme year
- From:
- Department for Culture, Media and Sport and Stephanie Peacock MP
- Published
- 21 October 2024
- Last updated
- 8 January 2025 — See all updates
We are analysing your feedback
Visit this page again soon to download the outcome to this public feedback.
Detail of feedback received
DCMS received responses from ten stakeholder organisations, the three Devolved Administrations and one author registered for PLR.
See Government Response document
Summary
Consultation on the proposed rate per loan for the 2023 to 2024 Public Lending Right scheme year
This consultation closesran atfrom
to
Consultation description
The Public Lending Right (PLR) is a right for authors and other rights holders to receive payments from a central fund for the public lending of their books by libraries in the UK. The 2023 to 2024 PLR scheme year applies to the lending of physical books and audiobooks and the remote lending of e-books and e-audiobooks from public libraries.
Each year the British Library Board (who(which areis responsible for administering the scheme) makemakes a recommendation to the Secretary of State of the rate per loan to be paid from the PLR fund to registered authors, illustrators and other contributors. The rate per loan is calculated on the basis of the size of the fund available and an estimate by the British Library of the total number of loans of their registered works, obtained from a sample of public libraries in the UK.
The British Library Board has proposed a rate per loan of 11.76 pence for payments in the 2023 to 2024 scheme year. This is a reduction of 1.93 pence, from 13.69 pence (in 2022/23). This reflects the slightly raised amount of funding available (but the PLR fund remains relatively unchanged), and an increase in the estimated number of loans of books registered for PLR.
This consultation invites views from authors and other interested parties on the proposed rate per loan for the 2023 to 2024 PLR scheme year.
Documents
Consultation PLR rate per loan Scheme Year 2023-24
PDF, 188 KB, 2 pages
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Updates to this page
Published 21 October 2024
Last updated 8 January 2025
+ show all updates
-
Government Response document added
-
First published.
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Consultation description
The Public Lending Right (PLR) is a right for authors and other rights holders to receive payments from a central fund for the public lending of their books by libraries in the UK. The 2023 to 2024 PLR scheme year applies to the lending of physical books and audiobooks and the remote lending of e-books and e-audiobooks from public libraries.
Each year the British Library Board (who(which areis responsible for administering the scheme) makemakes a recommendation to the Secretary of State of the rate per loan to be paid from the PLR fund to registered authors, illustrators and other contributors. The rate per loan is calculated on the basis of the size of the fund available and an estimate by the British Library of the total number of loans of their registered works, obtained from a sample of public libraries in the UK.
The British Library Board has proposed a rate per loan of 11.76 pence for payments in the 2023 to 2024 scheme year. This is a reduction of 1.93 pence, from 13.69 pence (in 2022/23). This reflects the slightly raised amount of funding available (but the PLR fund remains relatively unchanged), and an increase in the estimated number of loans of books registered for PLR.
This consultation invites views from authors and other interested parties on the proposed rate per loan for the 2023 to 2024 PLR scheme year.
Documents
Consultation PLR rate per loan Scheme Year 2023-24
PDF, 188 KB, 2 pages
Share this page
The following links open in a new tab
Updates to this page
Last updated 8 January 2025 + show all updates
-
Government Response document added
-
First published.
Sign up for emails or print this page
Update history
2025-01-09 13:02
Amended response
2025-01-08 11:04
Government Response document added
2024-10-21 09:41
First published.