From Yahoo/WT:
“USPS raising stamp price to 66 cents
in latest rate hike”
The U.S. Postal Service is raising
mail prices for most users, pushing the cost of a first-class stamp from 63
cents to 66 cents. The new rates, which cover other mail items including
periodicals and advertising mailers, are poised to take effect July 9 unless
overruled by the postal regulator. The 5.4 percent increase across all
first-class mail products is the agency's fourth rate hike in two years. It
also brings first-class mail costs up 32 percent since 2019, when a stamp ran
50 cents.
The price increases are part of
Postmaster General Louis DeJoy's turnaround of the mail agency, which was
facing hundreds of billions of dollars in unpayable liabilities when he took
office in June 2020. A year later, the Postal Service said it would increase
rates twice annually, making up for what it said were years' worth of
artificially low rates. Sending mail in the United States is still cheaper than
in nearly any country in the developed world. "As operating expenses
fueled by inflation continue to rise and the effects of a previously defective
pricing model are still being felt, these price adjustments are needed to
provide the Postal Service with much needed revenue to achieve the financial
stability," the agency wrote in a news release. Postal finance officials
also have blamed persistent inflation for increasing the agency's costs and
depressing consumer spending.
But higher rates threaten to drive
away the paper mail business that keeps the Postal Service's finances afloat.
First-class, business mail and periodicals made up close to $41 billion of the
agency's 2022 revenue, according to its annual report to Congress, compared to
$31.3 billion from packages. Revenue from parcels includes contracts with
express shipping and e-commerce firms - including Amazon, the Postal Service's
largest customer - that send their items through the mail. (Amazon founder Jeff
Bezos owns The Washington Post.)
The Postal Service posted a $1.03
billion loss in the final quarter of 2022, putting the agency behind DeJoy's
plan to make up a $160 billion projected budget shortfall by 2030. In 2023,
according to his projections, the mail service is supposed to break even. In
2024, it is supposed to be modestly profitable. The Postal Service is not
likely to hit those milestones, those it's received significant financial help
from Congress. Legislation passed in 2022 wiped $107 billion in past-due and
future liabilities off the agency's balance sheet. The Inflation Reduction Act
also granted the Postal Service $3 billion to electrify its fleet of delivery
trucks.
Critics of the price increases say
continued price increases harm the Postal Service's financial stability. "Rate
hikes of this frequency are unprecedented and unsustainable. If left unchecked,
DeJoy will plow ahead with additional stamp increases every few months, even
though data shows that they put the squeeze on the American public and diminish
mail volume," Kevin Yoder, executive director of Keep Us Posted, a mailer
industry and consumer advocacy group, said in a statement. "DeJoy's rate
strategy is shortsighted and needs to be rejected by the Postal Regulatory
Commission in the name of protecting this critical public service.
^ So they are going to raise the
price of stamps (again) even though their delivery in most of the US still has
issues.
We go days without any mail delivery
(even when the USPS Informed Delivery Service says we have mail) and even when
the weather is perfect - no snow, ice, etc.
Most People no longer send regular
mail (because of the expense, the wait and the delivery issues) and raising the
costs to send mail will only add more People to stop using the USPS. ^
https://finance.yahoo.com/news/usps-raising-stamp-price-66-161620216.html
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