Modern Postal Service Saves Tax Dollars

Regarding the opinion-page article ``No Stamp of Approval for Postal Rate Hikes,'' April 14: Does the author really believe the Postal Service is somehow magically exempt from the inflationary trends affecting all other agencies, businesses, and individuals?

The Postal Service will have gone a record four years with stable rates when new ones are implemented early in 1995. If the rates had been raised earlier this year, it would have cost the public an additional $8 billion. Since postal reorganization in 1971, no previous rates lasted longer than three years. The reason for the changes is that since 1971 the users of the mail, not the taxpayers, have been supplying postal revenue.

Sure, the cost of a letter was three cents from 1932 to 1938. What the author doesn't say is that the old Post Office Department lost money every one of those years and needed congressional bailouts using taxpayer funds.

Raising rates is not an obsession but rather an economic fact of life. The Postal Service is now working to make those increases fewer and smaller. The fact that first-class postage is so much less in the US than in Japan and Germany is a reflection of efficiency in the handling of 40 percent of the world's mail.

Although the Postal Service is facing ever-increasing competition, it is not dealing with a ``shrinking pool of customers'' - as its record 171.2 billion pieces of mail handled in fiscal year 1993 can attest.

Some of the author's suggestions are already reality. For example, 40 percent of our stamp production is currently being handled by outside contractors. And managers' salaries are more and more based on the performance of those they manage.

The postmaster general is looking forward to a significant role for the Postal Service in the electronic future while keeping the continued need for hard-copy communication as one of the organization's pillars. The Postal Service will not be put ``out of its misery'' by the ``information highway.'' Instead, it will use the electronic highway to help serve its customers better. Larry M. Speakes, Washington Vice President, Corporate Relations United States Postal Service

Your letters are welcome. For publication they must be signed and include your address and telephone number. Only a selection can be published, and none acknowledged. Letters should be addressed to ``Readers Write,'' and can be sent by Internet E-mail (200 word maximum) to OPED@RACHEL.CSPS.COM, by fax to 617-450-2317, or by mail to One Norway St., Boston, MA 02115

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