Another Boeing Whistleblower Has Died
Biden's Awkward Pause in Front of the Press Sparks an Embarrassing Theory
Don Lemon: The DEI Stuff Has Gone Off the Rails
The (Communist) Nerds Are the Bad Guys in This Movie
Biden's Advisers Push to Doing Something We All Knew Was Coming
My Favorite Story Of The Year (So Far)
Don't Obstruct the Leftist Implosion
No Satisfaction With Stone Age Celebrities Jagger and De Niro
University Trash Heaps
Why Do Leftists Hate Israel? (It’s Not What You Think)
The Corruption of Rep. Adam Schiff is Reaching a Tipping Point
Cringy Mark Hamill PC Shows Need for White House Reform
Expiring Tax Provisions Could Cost Thirty Million American Taxpayers New Accounting Fees
DNC Prepares for Violent Pro-Hamas Protests
'Genocide Joe,' Biden's Chances of Re-Election Looks Bleak
OPINION

The Postal Bailout

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement

These are dark times for the U.S. Postal Service. After years of rising postal rates and declining service, customers found a way to avoid using it entirely: a strange new technology that allows mail to be composed and sent instantly, for free, anywhere in the world. The legally mandated monopoly of the USPS on delivering this kind of mail was a key factor in its “business model,” since it already had plenty of competition for parcel delivery through UPS, Federal Express, and their many competitors.

Advertisement

Defenders of the Postal Service would often point to the relatively reasonable cost of a stamp, which was still a pretty good deal by any objective standard. The problem is that the government was spending a lot of money in subsidies to keep stamps that cheap, and with the widespread acceptance of email, even forty cents was suddenly a high price to pay for sending a letter. Postal revenues declined as the USPS entered a buggy-whip death spiral… and crashed upon the rocks of fabulously expensive employee benefits and restrictive employment rules, achieved through the wonder of collective bargaining by public employees.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos