Tag: Mail Services

Business leaders issue warning about UK postal competition

Birmingham’s business leaders are demanding protection for small businesses following the announcement that UK postal services will be privatised earlier than expected.

The industry regulator Postcomm decided to open postal services to full competition from next January, 15 months earlier than planned. Debbie Walsh, head of policy at Birmingham Chamber of Commerce and Industry, said she believed small to medium-sized enterprises would be the first to suffer.

She said: ‘Around 80 per cent of the daily postbag of 83 million letters and packets is sent by companies and we expect this lucrative end of the market to become the battleground between Royal Mail and private delivery companies.

Read More

European Commission takes a closer look at the Polish Post

The European Commission has a problem with Poczta Polska – it wonders whether the special privileges that the Postal Service enjoys are not a disguised form of state aid. Poczta Polska is a public utility enterprise, founded on a legal basis – this special legal status gives its a privileged position over potential competitors. Entities created by force of law are not subject to bankruptcy legislation – put simply, the Polish Post cannot go bankrupt. If it wants to obtain credit from a bank, such credit would be guaranteed by the state. This status was OK for many years, and the EC focused on it only after it received letters from the Polish government, asking it to approve aid programs for the Postal Service. The Commission has not decided yet if the situation of the Polish Post raises any concerns about fairness of competition -currently the Postal Service does not obtain any benefits from its status.

Read More

USPS Parcel Post volume losses continue, Express and Priority Mail see growth.

The US Postal Service released F1Q:05 (quarter ending December 31) results which include a look at preliminary Priority Mail, Express Mail, and Parcel Post statistics. Generally Parcel Post and to some degree Priority Mail
competes with UPS, FDX, and DHL’s ground parcel products. Express Mail competes with UPS, FDX, and DHL’s overnight air products. For the seventh quarter in a row, a y-o-y volume decline occurred within the USPS’ Parcel Post product which recorded a decline of 1.2% during F1Q:05. Comparably, UPS and FDX domestic ground products have grown y-o-y volume in the most recent quarters by 1.5% and 16.4%, respectively. Priority Mail volumes increased for the second quarter in a row by 2.4% year-over-year in F1Q:05. Similarly, Express Mail volumes were also positive, posting 0.6% year-over-year growth in the current quarter. This is the first time Express Mail volumes have improved on a year-over-year basis in the last fifteen consecutive quarters.

Read More

Triangle welcomes the UK mail market’s early liberalisation but..

The Postcomm announcement to bring forward the total liberalisation of the UK mail market, opening the Royal Mail to full competition earlier than previously announced, is brave but it does not necessarily mean that Royal Mail will immediately lose significant volumes of mail. Evidence in other markets, such as New Zealand and Sweden, where similar action has been taken, has led to little effective competition. If anything, the general public (who represent a minority of the market by volume) has ended up paying more and big business less as the incumbent gives discounts to volume senders and compensates for this by charging more for the standard letter. Notwithstanding this, our first class mail service is still one of the cheapest in Europe. Triangle feels that for the market to really open up there will need to be further stimulus to develop real competition, encourage new business models and ensure innovation. It can be done. A good example is the airline industry where deregulation has led to innovation such as the budget airlines and much cheaper and more widespread travel.

Read More

Japanese post offices to be operated like convenience stores

An over-the-counter postal services company, to be created through the privatization of state-backed Japan Post, will operate post offices like convenience stores and will offer friendly services to local people, according to proposed government legislation made available to Kyodo News on Thursday.
Post offices will offer services on behalf of a mail delivery company, issue certificates for local governments and sell tickets for events.

Read More

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement

P&P Poll

Loading

What's the future of the postal USO?

Thank you for voting
You have already voted on this poll!
Please select an option!



Post & Parcel Magazine


Post & Parcel Magazine is our print publication, released 3 times a year. Packed with original content and thought-provoking features, Post & Parcel Magazine is a must-read for those who want the inside track on the industry.

 

Pin It on Pinterest