The Death of Snail Mail
by Ian Mathias
Recently
by Ian Mathias: Fortunes
Made, Fortunes Lost
The U.S. Postal
Service is on track for a record $7 billion deficit this year. Thats
more than double last years loss.
Postmaster
General John Potter bumped up his previous projection by a billion
bucks yesterday, citing the growing expenses of six-day delivery
and employee retirement/health care plans. Potter and his team are
scrambling to cut costs left and right from a yearlong hiring
freeze to early retirement offers to branch closures. But we wonder
will it even matter?

The Government
Accountability Office recently labeled the USPS a high risk
federal program, and while were hard-pressed to think of any
risk-free government program, were inclined to agree.
The Postal
Service is facing a perfect storm of business risk: The business
is already loaded up with debt. Minimum wage and benefit costs are
rising while revenues are plummeting. For example, they are expected
to handle at least 27 million fewer pieces of mail this year than
in 2008. Is there any business in America that isnt looking
to cut shipping costs? (Theres this new technology weve
heard about called e-mail.)
Then theres
UPS and FedEx, two worthy private-sector rivals. And what about
Peak Oil? A summer of 2008 redux could cripple the whole industry.
Above all, the USPS is run by the government
cmon.
Snail mail
might not be dead, but we suspect the USPS is going the way of Amtrak,
at best.
They cant
even deliver our mail without losing money, yet the public looks
to the government to manage our health care? Oy
August
1, 2009
Ian Mathias
is managing editor of The
5 Min. Forecast and AgoraFinancial.com.
Since working for Agora Financial, respected media outlets including
Forbes.com, the Associated Press, Yahoo, and MSN Money have syndicated
his writing. He received his BA from Loyola College in Maryland
and is currently studying writing at the graduate level.
Copyright ©
2009 Daily Reckoning
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