Tag: Asia

USD 12mln to be invested in modernization of Armenia's postal service

A total of USD 12mln are to be invested in the modernization of postal service in Armenia until 2012, Hans Boon, Trust Manager, Haypost Company, told ARKA.

Under the trust management program, investments are supposed to cause progress in postal service, he said.

Boon also said that the main task of modernization is to improve the quality of postal services The Haypost Company also intends to introduce new technologies, which will bring postal service to conformity with international standards. The program also envisages modernization of post offices. Specifically, four to ten post offices will be completely renovated this year.

The Post Office will change its image. It will turn into a comfortable shop for clients, who will come with confidence that high-quality services will be rendered to them, Boon said.

A contract for the transfer of the Haypost Company (Armenia) to the trust management of the Haypost Trust Management Company (the Netherlands) was signed in Yerevan on November 30, 2006. Under the contract, the company was transferred to the Dutch company’s trust management for five years, with the right to prolongation for five years.

“Haypost Trust Management” “Amsterdam, Netherlands) was founded to implement the trust management program. The company is operating as part of cooperation with the Post Finance International Company, which is specializing in modernizing postal services in developing countries

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The privatization of Armenia's postal service is not expected now

The privatization of Armenia’s postal service is not expected now, Hans Boon, Trust Manager, Haypost Company, told ARKA.

The world experience shows that post is initially a state-run enterprise, part of public service. It can become a state-owned commercial structure. Only after that can post be privatized, Boon said.

According to him, privatization of post is the most difficult process, and any steps toward privatization must be most prudent and careful.

He also said that it is the Government that must make a decision on privatization of post. “Today we should think of post’s near future, which is in the formation of a powerful post sector and development of cooperation with the private sector,” Boon said.

A contract for the transfer of the Haypost Company (Armenia) to the trust management of the Haypost Trust Management Company (the Netherlands) was signed in Yerevan on November 30, 2006. Under the contract, the company was transferred to the Dutch company’s trust management for five years, with the right to prolongation for five years.

“Haypost Trust Management” “Amsterdam, Netherlands) was founded to implement the trust management program. The company is operating as part of cooperation with the Post Finance International Company, which is specializing in modernizing postal services in developing countries

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Indian Postal Insurance Likely to be Split Off

The Indian Post Office is likely to hive off its postal life insurance business into a separate entity by next year, following which it could come under Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority purview.

This will enable it to come up with more life products as well as avail of the investment opportunities offered to regular insurance companies.

While the modalities are being worked out, an investment committee has been formed to look for a fund manager for deploying the funds collected from postal life and rural postal insurance schemes into various avenues for investment.

“There are various amendments being brought about in the Postal Act and changes are likely to be introduced in the next session of the Parliament” said Shakeel Ahmad, minister of state for communication and information technology, said.

Indian Post will also metamorphose to a full-fledged bank called Post Bank of India in a few years.

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Postal department to collect Speed Post from homes

Sending Speed Post packets will be easier soon with the Department of Posts planning to start the service of collecting parcels from homes at no extra cost.

“We will set up toll-free call centres in eight cities this year where customers can call and get their packets picked up from their homes,” DoP general manager John Samuel said.

The postman would collect packets from homes and deliver it without taking any extra charges, he said. The call centres would be set up in Delhi, Mumbai, Kolkata, Chennai, Hyderabad, Bangalore, Pune and Ahmedabad.

DoP would also introduce a system of alerts which will inform customers about the receipt and delivery of Speed Post packets through SMS or e-mail.

Speed Post, which currently has a market share of 27%, expects revenues to go up to Rs550 crore in 2007-08 from Rs449 crore at present, Samuel said.

The monthly traffic from Speed Post exceeded Rs1.4 crore in March 2007.

“With our new measures, the volumes and revenues will definitely go up in future. We are expecting 40-50% increase in our monthly traffic,” Samuel said.

To make Speed Post competitive in the express industry, the government last week reduced the rates for local services by 40% to Rs12 from Rs20 earlier for up to 50 grams, but increased the rates in weight slabs above 50 grams.

Samuel said the Department would also expand its reach to 1,500 cities by the end of this year. It currently has about 5,000 booking offices across 1,200 cities.

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Economic policy: Japan Post aims at further aggrandisement

The crowning economic achievement of Mr Koizumi’s premiership was his enactment of legislation to privatise Japan’s vast postal empire. According to that law, in October Japan Post will be reorganised as a holding company with a delivery system, an insurance company and a savings bank as discrete subsidiaries. Over time those financial companies will be privatised and forced to compete with private enterprises. The legislation, however, embodies several potentially serious flaws. It lacks, for instance, stipulations that would prevent the three separate companies from continuing to co-operate intimately; to the contrary, they would ultimately be permitted to buy shares in each other and therefore to reconstruct much of the financial and corporate structure that has historically bound them together. In addition, the law states that the government guarantee of the insurance and banking companies’ products will not be phased out for many years to come. Hence, the companies will still enjoy a competitive and financial advantage over private insurers and banks.

Equally problematic are provisions that will allow the mail and package delivery service to expand into other businesses in order to render more of the country’s 24,000 local offices profitable. This was certainly what the new president of Japan Post, Yoshifumi Nishikawa, had in mind when he announced in April that the branches of his empire would soon start selling mortgages to retail customers. Given that he and his colleagues do not have experience in financial services, he said, they might seek the assistance of that equally dirigiste agency, the HFA. Mr Nishikawa also intends to transform the five- and six-storey main post offices in Tokyo, Osaka and Nagoya into skyscrapers of which the floor space can be rented as stores and offices. The ostensibly shrinking postal empire will thus expand into real estate, mortgage lending and perhaps other industries.

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