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Unfair Postal Competition
By Chris Edwards of Cato.
"With the rise of electronic communications, the volume of snail
mail has fallen precipitously, and the U.S. Postal Service (USPS) has
been losing billions of dollars. The 600,000-worker USPS is an
unjustified legal monopoly that is heavily subsidized. It is a
bureaucratic dinosaur that Congress should put on the way to extinction.
In April, I highlighted an excellent study
by Robert J. Shapiro that described USPS subsidies in detail. The
subsidies include: exemption from taxes, low-cost government borrowing,
monopoly protections, and other special benefits.
Shapiro completed another study in October,
which is a great addition to the postal debate. He details how
government-conferred advantages have translated into cross-subsidies
from USPS monopoly products to products sold in competitive markets. The
USPS uses its monopoly over letters and bulk mail to unfairly compete
with FedEx, UPS, and others on express mail and packages.
Shapiro finds that USPS raises prices on its monopoly products, and
uses those extra revenues to artificially push down prices on its
competitive products. For USPS, this makes sense because consumers are
less price sensitive for the monopoly products than for the competitive
products. Shapiro concludes, “USPS has strong incentives to
cross-subsidize its competitive products with revenues from its monopoly
operations,” and it does so by $3 billion or more a year.
For Fed Ex, UPS, and other private firms, this is completely unfair
because they have to pay taxes, borrow at market rates, and abide by all
the normal business laws and regulations. Fed Ex, for example, had an
effective income tax rate in 2015 of 35 percent, per the company’s 10-K.
That tax load is money that it could not use for reinvestment to meet
the subsidized USPS challenge. Shapiro thinks that “without its
subsidies, [the USPS] could probably not compete at all” with its more
nimble private competitors.
As Shapiro discusses, Congress and the USPS regulatory agency are
familiar with the cross-subsidy problem, but their solutions have been
weak. Part of the problem—as we also see with other government
businesses like Amtrak—is that USPS is secretive about its accounting,
and so the cross-subsidies are hidden.
The solution to all this is privatization and open entry. That would
end cross subsidies, increase efficiency, improve transparency, and
provide new opportunities for America’s entrepreneurs. Retaining special
protections for a centuries-old paper delivery system when 215 billion emails blast around the planet every day is getting pretty silly."
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