The United States Postal Service

1410 Words3 Pages

The United States Postal Service has been confronting some business, statistic, and innovative issues that should be tended to by administration. The real risk is the dwindling number of patrons. Post offices have witnessed a plunge in the number of customers, and statistics have shown a decrease from 28 million client visits in 2000 to 25 million clients by 2006, and that older clients visit more than younger clients
Revenues of post offices have tumbled and they have experienced substantial loss since 2000. Various services that were generally offered by the post offices are presently offered by other agencies much more efficiently in terms of time and cost. For example, customers are able to transact business, pay bills and receive retirement …show more content…

But why bother if it is heavily subsidized by the government, creating a competitive advantage. The central risk of bringing postal delivery once more under government control is that its capacity to keep up proficiency and continue top of innovation may be exhausted. That is not an unfavorable regulatory test. However, the test of keeping up universal postal service as a profitable business endeavor may well be unrealistic. It's a public benefit, and it should be the taxpayers' responsibility (Michael Hiltzik, …show more content…

Many institutions’ operations remain tied to it. Local governments send jury summons, vehicle registration renewals and other important documents by mail. Voting by mail is widespread in the United States, and Colorado, Oregon, and Washington hold all their elections by mail. Package delivery in America also is deeply dependent upon the Postal Service. FedEx and UPS have postal carriers deliver many small packages to sparsely populated rural areas. The Postal Service also is tasked by executive order to deliver medicines in the event of a terrorist biohazard attack. Many of the legislative reforms proposed in recent years dodge the existential question, and instead take for granted that the government should lug paper mail all over America’s 3.8 million square miles. Finding any significant reform that suits the two biggest interest groups (USPS unions and high-volume mailers) is very difficult. Senators from low-population and far-flung states tend to be especially averse to reforms that reduce the massively subsidized service their constituents receive (Kosar,

More about The United States Postal Service

Open Document