http://money.cnn.com/2013/02/06/news/economy/postal-service-cuts/index.html?hpt=hp_t1Great. Does anyone give a shit about the USPS? They could probably cut residential mail service to 2x/week and not have a significant negative impact. The reason they're hemorrhaging money is that no one uses the service. The internet and superior private package deliverers are killing the post office.I'm just pulling numbers out of my ass here, but I bet you could cut the number of urban post offices in half and it wouldn't matter much. Rural offices are a little more of a necessity, but you could drastically reduce the hours of service and people would cope just fine.
2/6/2013 11:24:19 AM
Most of what is delivered to me by USPS is junk mail. I wonder if the subsidized mail service actually allows junk mail to be sent more cheaply than it would in the absence of that subsidized service?
2/6/2013 11:30:52 AM
The postal service could operate as usual if congress hadn't manufactured the services current monetary crisis. They are basically requiring the USPS to fund the FULL liabilities of its pension system for the next 75 years - all within a 10 year time frame. Oh yeah and congress controls stamp prices and what services the postal service can offer, so even if they wanted to sock that much money away they couldn't.[Edited on February 6, 2013 at 11:39 AM. Reason : ^the post office hasn't received a significant amount of tax dollars since the 80s]
2/6/2013 11:34:30 AM
Yeah, I get maybe 10-20 meaningful items in the mail yearly. Birthday cards, Xmas cards, and the occasional government bill (property tax, car registration, etc.). Outside of that it's all shit I don't need. I realize this isn't the case for everyone, but I bet it's the case for a hell of a lot of people. When you can pay just about any bill online or on the phone, when email is free and internet access ubiquitous, and when parcel delivery is a competitive business the USPS just doesn't have much left to do.They need to consider price increases and/or serious limitations on frequency of service, shutting down a lot of offices, and gutting their staff. It's a very limited use service in today's world.^That is a not insignificant portion of the problem, but they should be required to fully fund all current employee pensions, and there should be some requirement for future pension guarantee. I don't take much issue with the pension thing, 75 years might be a bit unreasonable, but an 18 year old employee working now could very well live to be 93+. The bigger problem is that they won't raise rates, which is just stupid as hell.[Edited on February 6, 2013 at 11:39 AM. Reason : asdfsa]
2/6/2013 11:36:09 AM
^you need to consider our aging population, i'm guessing a significant portion check their email less than once a week and have relied on the mail service their entire lives.There is absolutely nothing wrong with funding future pensions, its just the requirement to fund it for 75 years and do it only in a 10 year time frame. Literally no other pension/retirement system in the world has that kind of obligation. Most I'm guessing only look at the next 25 years or less (for good reason). The Postal Service just wasn't able to sock away the required 5 BILLION dollars a year and still maintain itself. All congress would have to do is require them to fund 75 years over a 20 year time period and I bet they could have made it with no cuts in delivery.
2/6/2013 11:48:15 AM
2/6/2013 12:05:56 PM
That seems unlikely since they're ran a 16 billion dollar shortfall last year alone. The pension requirement hurt, a lot. It's far from their only problem, and IMO it's not even their biggest problem.And yes, I realize that a portion of our population is not computer savvy and still utilize the postal service for most correspondence, but it's a constantly shrinking population, and even they don't need daily mail service.
2/6/2013 12:06:41 PM
I'm looking for something written more recently, but I think Bob may have hit the nail on the head:http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/11/15/us-usa-postal-loss-idUSBRE8AE18Q20121115
2/6/2013 12:55:14 PM
So, how much is the lost revenue from the decrease in mail? If it's all at $.46 per piece (I know, probably not a very good assumption) that's still about a $4 billion dollar decrease.
2/6/2013 1:16:22 PM
2/6/2013 1:49:55 PM
the whole point of that article is to prop the notion of the pension, which is completely and utterly unsustainable. 401ks aren't the be-all end all, but it's the best available instrument for a joint employer/employee retirement plan.The reality is that companies that still offer a pension are going to be companies that go bankrupt before most of their workers can collect.
2/6/2013 2:20:33 PM
Why do people suddenly think they're entitled to retire in the last century? It makes absolutely no sense that you work for 40 years and then live comfortably without working for another 40 years. This is something that used to be reserved for very wealthy people. Social security and pensions came about, now people think everyone should be able to retire. That'd be great if the programs could actually stay solvent.If pensions "work" or are "sustainable", then it should be possible for workers to pay for them on their own. And, if that's the case, then it would be better for those workers to simply be paid the wages in the here and now so they can determine how the savings are stored and what risks, if any, those savings are subjected to. That is certainly better than having to trust a company or a government to not piss away your pension money.
2/6/2013 2:46:50 PM
So just to throw some numbers into the mix:http://about.usps.com/who-we-are/financials/10k-reports/fy2012.pdfFrom the period of FY2008 - FY2012, Postal's revenue has dropped from $74.9B to $65.2B. As noted, the drop was driven by a decline in first class, standard and periodical mail (~$11B). Packages and international mail helped offset the decline by ~$1.5B.In terms of operating costs, Postal has shed about 150,000 employees during that period for a total savings of about $5B. Postal's total expenses in FY12 were ~$81B, a deficit of ~$16B.However, I would note that of this $16B deficit, $14B is from retiree health benefits ($11B of which is from the Congressional mandate, pg. 32 shows a good breakdown of normal expenses versus the additional burdens). Note that the $14B is in addition to another $6B a year to current employees' retirement plans. So again, most of what is destroying Postal's books at this point are their retiree benefits.
2/6/2013 2:56:38 PM
2/6/2013 3:19:01 PM
2/6/2013 3:35:39 PM
Just get rid of the USPS system altogether. It's too hard to monitor people's communications when they use snail mail. Much easier to just read their e-mails without consent.
2/6/2013 4:34:38 PM
Did the Business helping their worker retirement plan/pension/whatever come about due to tax policy? Does matching and moving some of your wages to those types of accounts reduce the business's taxes somehow?I know there are some CFOs on here that can fill us in.
2/6/2013 4:43:39 PM
2/6/2013 4:44:54 PM
2/6/2013 5:36:57 PM
^^seeing as you once called having kids "selfish", too, i don't really view you as an authority on the matter. it's not selfish to want to keep what you've earned.and destroyer is absolutely correct. peoples' expectations about retirement and how long they should have to work have become entirely unrealistic, even to the point of blindly continuing systems and policies that add up to being doomed to failure. the wealthy have become scapegoats and punching bags in the eyes of liberals. got a problem? blame somebody with more than you.[Edited on February 6, 2013 at 5:38 PM. Reason : .]
2/6/2013 5:38:07 PM
2/6/2013 7:09:17 PM
USPS is severely handcuffed by the federal government. There's no way they can compete with the major carriers and expect to turn a profit, especially since they already subsidize their deliveries. It's cheaper for FedEx to take a package to a delivery center and then slap some postage on it so USPS can carry it the rest of the way. And that's only one reason why they are fucked. Time to stop pretending like these guys will ever turn a profit again.I still think its important that we keep the infrastructure though since they deliver to every address. So maybe the commercial carriers can pay an extra tax to keep it afloat since they benefit the most from it.Also, 46 cents doesn't even begin to cover the cost of having someone deliver a letter across the country.
2/6/2013 7:36:25 PM
2/6/2013 7:58:10 PM
2/6/2013 8:20:49 PM
2/6/2013 8:36:31 PM
As some people have already said, the postal service is out of date since everything is going to paying online. I agree that they need to cut the number of days they deliver in at least 90% of the nation. Most of us could probably survive with the mail only coming 2, or 3 days a week. Outside of a few things from the government, the rest is just junk mail. It's no big deal to me if my birthday card with money in it takes an extra day to get to me.
2/6/2013 8:52:35 PM
2/6/2013 8:55:01 PM
Ok, so after a few minutes of googling I'm not finding anything that indicates government provides incentives for 401K type retirement accounts that an everyday company might offer.This article suggests that the only subsidy is deferred taxes, and thats not really a subsidy at all.http://reason.com/blog/2012/11/28/how-on-earth-is-a-401k-a-government-subsand you know reason hates its subsidies I'm left to think that companies started offering investment plans because the labor market required them to do so to remain competitive.
2/6/2013 9:23:50 PM
^ There are some government regulations that open the company 401k to the peons, but I wouldn't call it a subsidy. Basically as I understand it, the corporate officers in the company and the top wage earners (usually one in the same) can't get the special tax benefits that a 401k provides unless some percentage of the company's regular employees are also enrolled in the plan.
2/6/2013 9:32:54 PM
2/6/2013 9:38:24 PM
Great. Property and ownership are real.I own the sun. Fuck you, you can't have it. It's mine. Stop using it.
2/6/2013 9:48:31 PM
Look, man. You wanna start a conversation about "morality," then you better be willing to back up your position that "property" and "ownership" are real things worth protecting.That was the whole point of my original response. If you want to talk about abstracts like "morality" and claim that they are "absolute," then you better be willing to defend your stance on private property. Both constructs are built on a spurious foundation. "Morality" is quite possibly the most vague conceit of all time. And it could EASILY be argued that the construct of ownership was invented to protect the haves from the have-nots."I have so much shit, more than I'll possibly ever need, while others are starving. How can I protect all my stuff? I know! I'll tell them that taking from me is morally 'wrong!' Nevermind how I went about getting all of this, though. Finders keepers, yo!"So if you wanna go down this philosophical road, you better have a damn good understanding of what the shit your talking about. Simply calling me a cunt ain't gonna cut it. That's some rookie, first-day, Mickey Mouse shit. I'm not about to let you off the hook that easily. You wanna talk about morality, then let's talk about morality exhaustively. Defend your position.[Edited on February 6, 2013 at 10:21 PM. Reason : ]
2/6/2013 9:54:05 PM
2/6/2013 10:19:17 PM
2/6/2013 10:21:11 PM
^And yet, farmers in South America get displaced from their land all the fucking time simply because they do not own the note declaring their ownership, despite having worked that land for generations. And by the very principles you endorse, you would find nothing morally reprehensible about that.I really doubt that you work the land of your apartment or house. If someone comes in and starts turning that land and farming crops, I doubt you'd just up and leave because, "hey, they earned it."Nah, you'd bend your logic to fit your own desires. At least other people can admit the motivations that drive their behavior. You never do, though. You speak in "moral absolutes," which is simultaneously naive and arrogant.The circumstances of theft are ALWAYS up for interpretation, and it almost always favors those with power over those without.The bank can foreclose on a million people, and people like you will defend the action because the tenants were "irresponsible," even though the act of forcibly removing someone from their home literally makes people homeless and is morally questionable, especially when done on a grand scale. Yet you defend it, because of the shitty loophole you've allowed to exist in your mind about what constitutes "ownership."
2/6/2013 10:29:59 PM
2/6/2013 10:43:37 PM
2/6/2013 10:50:30 PM
Way to completely ignore the crux of my post.YOU'RE the one who started arguing about moral absolutes. Not me. If you want to talk about morality, then you don't get to spin the argument into an economic debate about profit motive. If you're not prepared to defend your position in the abstract, then you really are in no position to declare me as someone not worth responding to. You don't get to make a bold claim such as "morality is absolute" then simply walk away. You gotta defend that shit.
2/6/2013 10:53:58 PM
One more point actually. In undergraduate engineering, we are taught simplified versions of equation systems, because it's difficult to understand the more complex ones. They work, to a point, but they aren't entirely correct.Societal morals are simplified versions of universal morals.[Edited on February 6, 2013 at 11:02 PM. Reason : This is a wonderful thread about the Postal Service ]
2/6/2013 10:54:00 PM
Conclusion: Stop fucking using "morality" as a basis of your argument if you're not willing to critically examine what morality entails. Otherwise you're just going to reduce yourself to namecalling and hissyfitting.What you really need to be doing is asking yourself if your definition of morality is really as static as you seem to think it is (hint: It isn't)
2/6/2013 10:57:30 PM
2/6/2013 11:01:16 PM
Huh? I asked him if he would give up his land if someone came in and was able to farm it, as that was his excuse to the idea of ownership of land. He intentionally ignored that.My question essentially boiled down to this: Is it morally acceptable to kick someone off their land because they did not fulfill a contract? Is upholding a contract morally more prudent than giving someone shelter?The whole point of the exercise is to show that morality IS, and always HAS BEEN relative. And that those who wield power can and usually do bend morality to fit their aims.If all you got out of it was a comparison of indigenous farmers to working poor Americans, then you've completely missed the point.[Edited on February 6, 2013 at 11:11 PM. Reason : relative - not relevant]
2/6/2013 11:07:18 PM
2/6/2013 11:14:54 PM
2/6/2013 11:20:19 PM
^^I hope you realize that by typing all of that out, you're demonstrating that different people have different ideas as to what constitutes "morality." And that at times, we give our morals different weight, especially when some of them are in conflict with one another.That's the whole point. Morality is plastic, and always open for debateHence my earlier post:
2/6/2013 11:20:24 PM
So, basically, he eviscerates what little argument you had, and you'll just ignore it
2/6/2013 11:22:56 PM
2/6/2013 11:27:18 PM
He would likely argue that it was not legally purchased in the first place, so the remainder of your scenario is invalid. What you are implicitly suggesting is that the land was "owned" by the people living there for thousands of years. Thus, any actual sale of the land should involve them. If it didn't, then the purchase wasn't proper, so no, the "purchaser" couldn't and shouldn't be able to kick the farmer off.]
2/6/2013 11:30:14 PM
^says the guy who thinks Palestinians have no right to their homes.
2/6/2013 11:32:40 PM
I've said no such thing. Nice attempt at tu quoque, but you've got to at last get my position correct.
2/6/2013 11:35:41 PM