Welsh publishers face an existential crisis following a decade of cuts, a committee heard.
Helgard Krause, chief executive of the Aberystwyth-based Books Council of Wales, said cuts in the past year have made it difficult to operate after years of standstill funding.
She also pointed to production pressures with the cost of printed books rising significantly as she gave evidence to a Senedd culture committee inquiry.
Ms Krause raised concerns about a fall in the number of Welsh-medium books from 185 to 122 in the past decade, particularly in light of the target of a million Welsh speakers by 2050.
She told the committee: “It feels counterintuitive that the thing to help with language skills, namely books, is being cut.”
Asked what would happen if similar cuts were repeated in the 2025/26 budget, Ms Krause stressed that the Books Council passes most of its funding onto the publishing industry.
“For some, the impact is fewer books – for others, it's an existential crisis,” she said.
Ms Krause warned: “We’re at risk of losing publishers completely.”
She said the Books Council – which has annual revenue of about £3m, half of which comes from the Welsh Government – has sought to absorb cuts over the years by reducing staff.
“When I started seven years ago, there were 50 people working in the organisation,” she explained. “Now, we’re down to 36.”
Ms Krause told the committee that unlike some other culture bodies, the Books Council has not received any extra in-year money.
Ms Krause said: “We are at risk of turning to the old regime where publishing was a little bit a gentleman’s occupation, namely those people who can afford to work in the area.”
Calling for a ten-year strategic intervention to make Wales a reading nation, Ms Krause urged the Welsh Government to adopt international examples of best practices.
Ms Krause said she supported the principle of the Arts Council’s calls for culture and the arts to become a statutory responsibility, but pointed out that libraries are already a statutory duty, yet “we’re losing, across Britain, or have done, thousands of libraries in the last decade”.