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« Are you receiving senior-level attention? | Main | A fruit that has clearly soured »

June 09, 2011

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Carl

Ed, nice blog. I agree with you that the USPS should have been better prepared for the email/paperless society. Having said that, there are a host of profit making industries (newspapers, music) and businesses (Blockbuster) that didn’t adequately foresee and prepare for the impact of the internet.

In the UK the Royal Mail is experiencing many of the same criticisms as the USPS, but when it comes to the budget issue I would repeat a very interesting comment I once heard: “Royal Mail doesn’t lose millions of pounds every year; it costs millions of pounds to run a postal service.”

I disagree that the USPS should be left to die a normal institutional death. While I think that a $15bn debt is way too much, I believe that a national postal service that is affordable to all is a lynchpin of society and should not be left entirely to the mercy of market forces, in the same way of education, law enforcement, national defense and, as with every industrialized country in the world except America, healthcare.

Ed Moed

Thanks for your thoughts Carl. I don’t disagree with you. But, have two points of rebuttal:

1)Blockbuster just went bankrupt. So have many, many newspapers. Blockbuster was way too slow in seeing how cable and the Internet were changing the content landscape With newspapers, it almost wasn’t fair how quickly the Internet killed their models. Still, the strong survive and natural forces should kill off those who can’t change.
2)Maybe we have to bail out government owned entities like USPS because the public needs it. But, that doesn’t excuse it from losing money due to poor leadership and zero innovation. I think instead we need to put people in charge who can change the way things are done there so that this doesn’t happen every few years.

Carl

New leadership is exactly what the Royal Mail is putting in place. They are really shaking things up and it is leading to a lot of issues with the unions.

I will say that as a customer, the experience delivered by the USPS is superior to that of Royal Mail and the Post Office.

Steve

I concur with both thoughts expressed in the comments: the postal service is a public good or necessity that is worth subsidizing; but that said, it makes sense to run it as efficiently as possible to reduce the cost to the taxpayer.

I'm not sure that the problem with USPS management is necessarily that they came up through governmental ranks; after all, how many giant allegedly "for profit" companies have been horribly run by their private sector managers and only survived due to massive government bailouts? Car companies and many of our largest banks spring immediately to mind.

The problem is a more basic lack of accountability--when, unlike an entrepreneur with his or her own "skin in the game," the management of a giant organization is exempt from personally experiencing the company's losses, you'll have bad, negligent, or reckless management. The USPS and most other large organizations, public or private, need to structure in such a way that when the company loses money, the management loses money (as opposed to maybe merely getting less of a bonus)--the only way to force people to be careful with money is make them put their own money in the pot.

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