PRH CEO Nihar Malaviya said that any growth the industry has seen has been offset by increased costs.

Andrew AlbaneseA July 18 letter from Penguin Random House CEO Nihar Malaviya confirmed that long-rumored layoffs have become a reality at the nation’s biggest publishing house.

According to Publishers Weekly, PRH CEO Nihar Malaviya said that any growth the industry has seen recently has been offset by increased costs across the board, and that publishing leaders expect these increases, including inflation, to continue.

AAP StatShot numbers for May reported year-over-year sales up slightly for adult trade books, with 2023 showing $426.5 million against $403.4 million in 2022. A 14.1% decline in May in the children’s/YA segment was offset by gains in sales of adult books and college course materials, leading to total sales in the month holding even with 2022, PW reported.

“For the first five months of the year, AAP adult sales are actually up slightly very slightly—but not enough to make up for inflated costs, it seems, and, what many publishing leaders fear may be softening consumer spending for the coming months,” PW senior writer Andrew Albanese tells CCC’s Chris Kenneally.

In addition to the PRH layoffs revealed this week, HarperCollins announced the closure of its young adult books imprint Inkyard Press, and independent book distributor IPG said it had laid off nine employees.

Every Friday, CCC’s “Velocity of Content” features the editors and reporters of Publishers Weekly for an early look at what news publishers, editors, authors, agents, and librarians will be talking about when they return to work on Monday.

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