Australia Post doesn't make profits and losses, it provides services - and services have costs, not losses.
Expecting Australia Post to:
A) Deliver packages of international origin for free
B) To unprofitable remote/rural areas
C) AND turn a profit like a business whilst
D) For profit courier companies undercut them on profitable metro areas...
Well it's not going to work long term.
And post offices are more than just places to drop off a package you want delivered, lots of people use them as their local bank branch for necessary in person tasks - especially in the a fore mentioned rural areas.
Long story short, Australia Post should not have been privatised - it's an essential service and essential services are natural monopolies.
I agree. The same for the health service. It's not a for profit business (or should not be). It is a service, that we spend our taxes on, it costs money and doesn't expect a return, except for better health outcomes.
As someone who has lived in rural Australia - they barely service anywhere outside of metro areas.
My brother lives just an hour from a major regional city (population 150k), on the outskirts of a relatively large town, only a five min drive to a large post office that serves tens of thousands of people. He still doesn't get mail delivery and has to pay for a PO Box.
In fact - the private couriers offer far better service for his address.
I'm not denying your story, I lived in rural SA for a long time and saw the services get peeled away.
But I stand by my broader point of what should be the case, because it's certainly not what is.
Minor nitpick but I don't believe that's correct, they're part of the universal postal union where they set prices for other post companies to send into Australia.
I'm no post enthusiast though, so it might not be correct, that's just my understanding.
I can't find anywhere listing what we get in UPU fees for things coming into Australia from China, but I have recently ordered items for a few dollars which have not charged me for postage.
Something doesn't add up here.
The minimum cost of anything coming out of China should be the UPU, completely ignoring handling, packaging and the item itself.
So either Aliexpress/China is subsidizing sending crap over here, or Australia Post is not getting the fees.
It's a "self funded government business enterprise" which IMO means it's not private and it's still appropriate to say that it's turned a loss, given that the expectation is for it to be self-funded.
Post is an essential service but it's becoming less essential as time goes by. Perhaps it's essential that I have the capacity to receive letters, but I don't remember the last time I received a letter of any import.
Presently it's only a $200m loss or cost but the article discusses the forecast increases. I think it's natural and healthy to have a conversation about what service delivery can be altered to preserve benefits for the most people while reducing costs.
Given such an essential service, I personally don't think it's important they are turning a profit. But is it run efficiently? I have no idea and this article doesn't really go into it.
Had a quick search and found
Australia Post's Efficiency of Delivering Reserved Letter Services. Haven't read it in full yet but first glance looks interesting.
And from some quick digging,
I found that every year their revenue increases:
At the time, there was the Leppington Triangle land deal scandal in the media and the AusPost Cartier watch issue was blown out of proportion to become the new story.
After recording a profit before tax of just $23.6m for the six months to 31 December, the chief executive, Paul Graham, had warned in February that Australia Post will report a loss this year for the first time since 2015.
These include reducing letter frequency and closing some full-service post offices in metro areas while allowing more self-service options such as parcel lockers.
The communications minister, Michelle Rowland, said “Australia Post is a cherished national and publicly-owned institution” facing “significant structural headwinds”.
“The Albanese government is committed to supporting Australia Post modernise so that it can continue delivering the essential services consumers and small businesses rely on to stay connected,” she said.
The Liberal MP Keith Wolahan, who is campaigning against closures in the eastern suburbs of Melbourne, warned that “Australia Post is about more than letters and parcels”.
The independent senator David Pocock agreed that post offices serve a “very important purpose”, including providing banking services and getting photos for ID.
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