Why We Should Privatize the Postal Service
It's a costly, slow way to shuffle junk mail around. Let's open it up to competition.
HD DownloadWhat's the best way to make the Post Office faster and cheaper? Pull the government's tendrils out of it and let it loose in the private sector. That's what countries like Britain, Germany, and the Netherlands have done as email and social media eclipse traditional snail mail. In the latest Mostly Weekly Andrew Heaton explores why the Post Office is leaking money and stamps all over the place, and the best way to it get it on track.
As communication technology has grown by leaps and bounds, the Post Office struggles to remain relevant. More importantly, it's struggling to remain fiscally solvent. Its unfunded liabilities are at a staggering $70 billion. Meanwhile, it's losing money every year–it's lost $50 billion in the last decade, and is pushing up against the credit limit allowed by Congress. A day of reckoning is on the way, and when that happens, it will either need a massive taxpayer bailout, or private sector flexibility.
Mostly Weekly delivers the answer to America's mail problem. And it does so quickly, without long lines, and without losing billions of dollars in the process.
Mostly Weekly is hosted by Andrew Heaton with headwriter Sarah Rose Siskind. Watch past episodes here.
Script by Andrew Heaton with writing assistance from Sarah Rose Siskind, Brian Sack, and David Fried
Edited by Austin Bragg and Sarah Rose Siskind.
Produced by Meredith and Austin Bragg.
Theme Song: Frozen by Surfer Blood.
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Pulling the government's tendrils out of it would remove the need to privatize it at all. It's only a disastrous money pit now BECAUSE of one particular tendril:
The Postal Accountability and Enhancement Act of 2006.
Prior to PAEA the USPS was meeting all obligations and even making a small profit every year. The day after it was enacted, the USPS became the money pit it is today, owing several times its available funds to its own pension plan, to the extent it couldn't afford to both fund pensions and deliver mail.
Repeal PAEA and there would be no need for privatization.
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Thanks for the comment. This article doesn’t really capture the complexity of the issue. Without discussing prefunding pensions and serving the greater good for rural areas, these arguments ring as empty ideology.
Your suggestion sounds like it would address some major issues without throwing the baby out with the bath water.
Regarding subsidizing rural areas via usps, IDK if I’d want to make things harder on rural folks without knowing who the subsidy is benefitting and how cost effective it is relative to other subsidies and overall budget.
Rural counties are a drain on the USPS. We need a private agency to prune the dead branches of the USPS bureaucracy, or at least find the proper market price for sending mail from BFE.
People in these distant locations need to take responsibility for their choices.
Look at the costs between large cities and rural counties.
Who gets better service? It can take longer to deliver LA to LA than LA to Podunk, OK...
". . . the power to establish post offices and post roads . . ."
OR, if you want to claim that the internet/email has relegated the USPS to the dust bin of history - Then municipal & rural high-speed broadband from coast to coast in accordance with the original intent of the Founding Fathers.
(And to keep the current Telco & Cable behemoths in the Corporate Caliphate honest with real competition that would justify their obnoxiously high charges and sub-par, compared to even remote sparsely populated counties like Iceland, speeds.)