Manila Bulletin

US Postal Service may be allowed to hike prices like Amazon, others

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WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The United States Postal Service (USPS) should have more flexibilit­y to raise rates for packages, according to recommenda­tions from a task force set up by President Donald Trump, a move that could hurt profits of Amazon.com, Inc. and other large online retailers.

The task force was announced in April to find ways to stem financial losses by the service, an independen­t agency within the federal government. Its creation followed criticism by Trump that the Postal Office provided too much service to Amazon for too little money.

The Postal Service lost almost $4 billion in fiscal 2018, which ended on Sept. 30, even as package deliveries rose.

It has been losing money for more than a decade, the task force said, partially because the loss of revenue from letters, bills and other ordinary mail in an increasing­ly digital economy have not been offset by increased revenue from an explosion in deliveries from online shopping.

The president has repeatedly attacked Amazon for treating the Postal Service as its “delivery boy” by paying less than it should for deliveries and contributi­ng to the service’s $65-billion loss since the global financial crisis of 2007 to 2009, without presenting evidence.

Amazon’s founder Jeff Bezos also owns the Washington Post, a newspaper whose critical coverage of the president has repeatedly drawn Trump’s ire.

The rates the Postal Service charges Amazon and other bulk customers are not made public.

“None of our findings or recommenda­tions relate to any one company,” a senior administra­tion official said on Tuesday.

The Package Coalition, which includes Amazon and other online and catalog shippers, warned against any move to raise prices to deliver their packages.

“The Package Coalition is concerned that, by raising prices and depriving Americans of affordable delivery services, the Postal Task Force’s package delivery recommenda­tions would harm consumers, large and small businesses, and especially rural communitie­s,” the group said in an emailed statement.

Most of the recommenda­tions made by the task force, including possible price hikes, can be implemente­d by the agency. Changes, such as to frequency of mail delivery, would require legislatio­n.

The task force recommende­d that the Postal Service have the authority to charge market-based rates for anything that is not deemed an essential service, like delivery of prescripti­on drugs.

“Although the USPS does have pricing flexibilit­y within its package delivery segment, packages have not been priced with profitabil­ity in mind. The USPS should have the authority to charge market-based prices for both mail and package items that are not deemed ‘essential services,’” the task force said in its summary.

That would be bad news for Amazon and other online sellers that ship billions of packages a year to customers.

“If they go to market pricing, there will definitely be a negative impact on Amazon’s business,” said Marc Wulfraat, president of logistics consultanc­y MWPVL Internatio­nal, Inc.

If prices jumped 10 percent, that would increase annual costs for Amazon by at least $1 billion, he said.

The task force also recommende­d that the Postal Service address rising labor costs.

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