Mail competition is 'no benefit'
The liberalisation of the UK postal service has produced "no significant
benefits" for either households or small businesses, a report has said. That is the
initial finding of an independent review of the UK
postal sector commissioned by the government. It warned there was now a threat to the
Royal Mail's financial stability. The Royal Mail's 350-year monopoly ended at the
start of 2006, when other licensed operators were given the right to collect and deliver
mail.
'Untenable'
The independent panel warned that the "substantial threat" to the Royal Mail's financial security threatened the universal service - the collection and delivery to all UK addresses.
Maintaining the universal service is at the heart of this review - ensuring collection from pillar boxes and post offices and delivery to all addresses (The report panel). As a result, the independent panel - which will produce its full report in the summer - said the continuing "status quo is not tenable".
"The policies needed to establish a sustainable future will be the focus of our
report later this year," they said. While the initial report said homes and
small firms had not gained from the increased competition, it said large companies had
"seen
clear benefits from liberalisation - choice, lower prices and more assurance about the
quality of the mail service".
REPORT'S KEY FINDINGS
Royal Mail's financial security is now at threat Competition has offered no benefit for
homes and small firms Big companies have gained from more bulk mail competition Royal Mail
has no competition in 'final mile' delivery.
It says these large firms have benefited from the big growth in competition in the bulk
mail sector - postal firms that collect,
sort and transport bulk mail before handing it over to the Royal Mail for the final
delivery. Yet at the same time, the report found that the Royal Mail still had
"virtually no competition" in the delivery of addressed letters over the
"final mile" to letterboxes. "Maintaining the universal service is at the
heart of this review - ensuring collection from pillar boxes and post offices and delivery
to all addresses," said the report.
'Stable future'
Looking towards the final report, the panel said it needed "to establish how best
to create the incentives for Royal Mail to
modernise its operation, providing a stable financial future". Last year Royal
Mail announced a programme of changes to pay and working practices which it said were
essential to modernise the service and enable it to compete more effectively.
However this led to a strike by Royal Mail staff and a
bitter dispute which, although now resolved, is estimated to have cost
Royal Mail more than £200m. The independent review panel was appointed by the Department
for Business, Enterprise and Regulatory Reform. Story from BBC
NEWS:http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/1/hi/business/7385044.stm
Published: 2008/05/06 09:14:24 GMT© BBC MMVIII