This
was Saturday's mail. I think the heaviest of the week. Four
pieces. The average used to be, and by used to be I mean just a
month ago, a dozen pieces, including several merchandising
catalogs. My first thought was "economy has really tanked. Nobody left trying to sell stuff."
Then, an alternative explanation loaded. The postage increase a
few weeks ago. Has the gummint run afoul of yet another Laffer
curve, by raising business cost (tax) in a poor economy past the
threshold of profitability? You can never go wrong by blaming
congress first, but I looked stuff up. First, some good news.
Woot-Woo! Another guy, Errol Lewis, offers in the Daily News
this reason for the USPS appetite for mo money, mo money. A
reason reminiscent of what drove our otherwise healthy auto industry
into near extinction. Congressional Union mandates.
Yes, I'm saying that the US Congress is today little more than a
national union.
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the $6 billion deficit is a burden dumped on the postal service by
Congress. By law, the postal service must use current dollars to
pre-fund future employee health and retirement benefits, a financial
shackling that turns what ought to be a surplus into a deficit.
Before the pre-funding law was passed in 2006, the postal service had
fallen behind on paying benefits. That problem, however, has been
fixed. A bill currently before Congress can - and should - be passed to
eliminate the deficit by relaxing its benefit payment schedule.
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If I'm reading this correctly, congress mandated what might be
called golden parachute pay, health and retirement benefits, but
funding them "turns what ought to be a surplus into a
deficit." Horry Clap, what a concept. And the fix is
to relax the funding rules and be rich again? Is that what you
read?
I know, it sounds obscenely stupid, but we're talking about a congress
that capped the postmaster general's pay at 20% more than the salary
paid to the vice president of the United States." Which he got
around by giving himself performance bonuses. What could go
wrong.
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