Monday, May 11, 2009

USPS increases prices, continues to diminish its relevance

From the AP's Randolph Schmid in the C-J...

The price of a first-class stamp for mailing a letter - or paying a bill - climbed to 44 cents Monday, though folks who planned ahead and stocked up on Forever stamps will still be paying the lower rate.

It's the third straight year rates have gone up in May under a new system that allows annual increases as long as they don't exceed the rate of inflation for the year before.

That must allow for rounding (up), since inflation was not that high last year.

While the increase will bring in added income, the post office continues to struggle financially as more and more lucrative first-class mail is diverted to the Internet, and the recession discourages businesses from sending their usual volume of advertising.

The Postal Service, which does not get a taxpayer subsidy for its operations, lost $2.8 billion last year and is already $2.3 billion in the hole just halfway through this year.

That's funny. No subsidy (anymore)-- aside from the monopoly power, of course! And where's the money coming from-- debt, paid for by taxpayers as the USPS continues to spiral down the drain.

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