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A MEASURE OF SCALE ECONOMIES FOR POSTAL SYSTEMS
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ROBERT H. COHEN
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U. S. POSTAL RATE COMMISSION
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EDWARD H. CHU
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U.S. ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
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PUBLISHED IN MANAGING CHANGE IN THE POSTAL DELIVERY INDUSTRIES,
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ED. MICHAEL A. CREW AND PAUL R. KLEINDORFER, KLUWER ACADEMIC
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PUBLISHERS, 1997
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THE VIEWS EXPRESSED IN THIS PAPER ARE THOSE OF THE AUTHORS AND
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DO NOT NECESSARILY REPRESENT THE OPINIONS OF THE POSTAL RATE
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COMMISSION OR THE ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY. MR. CHU WAS A
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PROFESSIONAL STAFF MEMBER OF THE POSTAL RATE COMMISSION FROM
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1993-1995. A PRELIMINARY VERSION OF THIS PAPER WAS PRESENTED AT
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WISSENSCHAFTLICHES INSTITUT FÜR KOMMUNIKATIONSDIENSTE (WIK) GMHH,
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3RD KÖNIGSWINTER SEMINAR, COST OF UNIVERSAL SERVICE, NOVEMBER
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1995.
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Introduction
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The delivery function is comparatively new to modern postal
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services. Originally the post was simply an inter-city letter
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service. One could deposit a letter at the post office in a city
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for transportation to the post office in another city where the
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recipient would call for it.1 It was not until the mid-nineteenth
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century that city delivery began on a regular basis in the U.S. By
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the end of the century rural delivery was started on a limited
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basis, but it did not become ubiquitous until the early part of the
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twentieth century.
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Delivery changed the post in many ways. No doubt it has been a
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substantial cause of the tremendous growth in volume since its
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inception. But delivery also changed the economics of the modern
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post because it introduced a large amount of fixed costs.
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While the letter mail monopoly preceded the introduction of
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delivery service, the fixed costs associated with delivery underlie
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the two modern justifications for the letter monopoly. First, it is
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argued that a letter mail monopoly is necessary to assure universal
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service at a uniform price. Second, it is argued that delivery is a
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natural monopoly and that legal protection is necessary to prevent
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"cream skimming" and thereby to maximize the benefit of the
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universal delivery system.2 The first argument is a political one
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which presumes significant urban-rural cross subsidizes in
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delivery. The second is an economic argument which presumes that
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the Postal Service as a monopolist is an efficient provider of
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delivery. The analysis presented here is an attempt to address the
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second argument.
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1
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Campbell, James I., Jr., "An Introduction to the History of the
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Postal Monopoly Law in the United States," The Last Monopoly, The
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CATO Institute, Washington, D.C., 1996.
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2
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For purposes of this paper, "cream skimming" refers to
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concentration on serving only those markets that exhibit
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lower-than-average delivery costs, regardless of the characteristic
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that causes those costs to be less than average. Such
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characteristics are not confined to network density and could
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include favorable geographic, demographic, or operational
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characteristics. For example, in the U.S., curb delivery is less
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costly than park and loop delivery which is less costly than foot
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delivery.
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In an unsubsidized postal system as in the United States, the
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postal customer bears all costs of the system. The customer
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therefore is the beneficiary where return to scale are maximized by
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having a single firm (a monopoly) provide delivery. On the other
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hand, monopolies can be harmful to consumers when they protect
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technically inefficient behavior, and allow economic rents to be
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extracted.3 This paper sets up a framework to examine the following
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question: Do the economies of scale in the delivery function exceed
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the technical inefficiencies and economic rents of the Postal
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Service? In short, does the monopoly increase or decrease the price
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of postal services to postal customers?4
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This paper measures the returns to scale of the U.S. delivery
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function. It then compares this benefit with the cost that the
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monopoly imposes on the consumer.
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Because delivery involves so much fixed cost, it would create a
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tremendous barrier to entry even if the legal monopoly were
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abolished. Thus, it may be that having once enjoyed a de jure
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monopoly, national posts would enjoy a de facto monopoly even if
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the legal one were abolished. 5 This paper provides a
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quantification of the barrier to entry in the letter mail market in
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the United States caused by high fixed costs in the delivery
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function.
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This paper next estimates the value of scale in delivery
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exhibited by 21 national postal systems based on data from an
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unpublished paper which was presented at the 1994 Stockholm
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conference on Postal and Delivery Services.6 7 Finally, it compares
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the estimated value of scale with an estimate of the wage premium
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in each country.
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3
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It is also claimed that monopolies harm consumers with lower
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quality of service and by being less innovative than firms which
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must compete.
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4
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It is important to distinguish postal consumers (i.e., paying
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customers) from recipients of mail. The latter may derive great
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benefits from a monopoly in the form of services that would not be
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provided in a competitive postal environment. These might be called
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political rents. Consumers, being forced to underwrite the
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political rents and any inefficiencies and economic rents in the
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system, may be better off in a competitive environment.
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5
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This may well be the case in Sweden which abolished its monopoly
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in 1993. A letter mail competitor began operations in Stockholm
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where it captured 20 percent of the market, but, nonetheless,
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failed.
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6
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"An Exploratory Quantitative Comparison of Postal
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Administrations in Industrial Countries."
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7
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The data for each country is from 1988 and is based on UPU
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statistics which have been verified and revised as necessary based
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on communications with officials in most of the countries.
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The Uniqueness of the Delivery Function
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We distinguish what is known in the U.S. as the "in-office"
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delivery function and the street delivery function. The former is
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an extension of mail processing; it is where the mail is sorted
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into the delivery sequence. "Delivery function" as used in this
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paper refers to street delivery.
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Recent empirical research confirms the widely held belief that
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economies of scale exist in the delivery of mail.8 Other functional
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components of the Postal Service are presumed here not to exhibit
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significant scale economies, although this has not been
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demonstrated.
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John Panzar has characterized street delivery as a bottleneck
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function because a single firm can deliver to a recipient at a
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lower total cost than multiple firms delivering to the same
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customer. He suggests that processing and transportation of mail do
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not seem to be characterized by scale economies, and that they
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could be provided by competing firms. Under this scenario, he
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suggests that rates be set to allow nondiscriminatory access to the
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monopoly delivery service by the firms competing in processing and
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transportation.9
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The Postal Rate Commission and the U.S. Postal Service have
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implicitly recognized the absence of significant scale economies in
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mail processing and transportation functions in the Postal
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Service's rate structure. Postal rates in the
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U.S. allow for a substantial degree of competition with the
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Postal Service in mailprocessing and transportation. For example,
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the U.S. Postal Service gives sorting and barcoding discounts to
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about 40 percent of First-Class letter volume. Mailers perform
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about 60 percent of this worksharing, while third parties perform
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the
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8
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"Natural Monopoly and Technological Agnosticism: The Case of the
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U.S. Postal Service," Michael
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D. Bradley and Jeff Colvin, June, 1995.
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9
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Panzar, John, "Competition, Efficiency, and the Vertical
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Structure of Postal Services," Regulation and the Nature of Postal
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and Delivery Services, Ed. Michael A. Crew and Paul R. Kleindorfer,
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Kluwer Academic Publishers, 1993.
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rest.10 11 In some classes, mailers transport much of their mail
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to downstream locations to take advantage of zoned rates for
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transportation.
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Street Delivery Cost
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While the Postal Service collects extensive data on the cost
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behavior of city delivery carriers, it collects little data on the
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cost behavior of rural carriers12 For purposes of this analysis, we
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assume throughout that rural delivery cost behavior is similar to
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that of city delivery.13 In the U.S., street delivery costs for
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rural and city carriers combined comprises 21 percent of total
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costs. See Table 1.
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Table 1 USPS Operational Costs by Major Function
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Note: Nonoperating costs, such as payments made to the Treasury
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for retroactive charges are excluded.
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10
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These third-party sorters collect mail from mailers, sort and
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apply barcodes, and deliver the mail to the Postal Service for a
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portion of the discount. In addition, discounts encourage bulk
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advertising mailers to sort their mail all the way to the carrier's
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walk sequence, thereby avoiding the carrier "in-office"
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function.
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11
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Economic rents in the form of a wage premium paid by the U.S.
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Postal Service partially explain why mailers and third parties can
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sort mail at a lower cost than the Postal Service. When third
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parties compete with the Postal Service, however, in highly
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automated operations such as applying barcodes with optical
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character readers and sorting barcoded mail, a wage premium would
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seemingly not be a very significant factor.
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12
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The U.S. Postal Service has two types of delivery personnel;
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city delivery carriers and rural carriers. In 1993, there were 164
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thousand city delivery routes with 80 million delivery points and
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49 thousand rural routes with 23 million delivery points. Rural
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costs were 20 percent of total delivery costs.
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13
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For example, it is assumed that the ratio of rural carrier
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in-office cost to total rural carrier cost is the same as the ratio
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of city carrier in-office cost to total city carrier cost.
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This paper adopts the analysis of street delivery costs
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presented by the U.S. Postal Service in several rate proceedings
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over the past 20 years. That analysis disaggregates street delivery
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time into three subcomponents: route time, access time, and load
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time. "Route time" is the time it would take a carrier to walk or
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drive the route, passing, but not accessing, any delivery point.
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"Access time" is the time it takes a carrier to deviate from the
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route in order to make a delivery. This may mean departing from the
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basic line of travel and walking or driving to a delivery point and
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returning to the basic line of travel, or it may mean slowing down
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from normal driving speed, stopping to make a delivery to a
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curbside mail receptacle, and then resuming normal speed. Finally,
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"load time" is the time it takes a carrier to place the mail in a
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mail receptacle. 14 Table 2 disaggregates street time in the
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U.S.
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Table 2
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Note: For simplicity, coverage-related load time ($1,232
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million) is included in access time, and street support is
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"piggybacked" on all three functions.
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Route time costs are essentially fixed, while access is partly
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variable, and
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load time is 100 percent variable with volume. The analysis of
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variability of access
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time involves estimating the number of new accesses that would
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be caused by an
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increment of volume. In the U.S., approximately 93 percent of
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all possible stops
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receive mail each delivery day. 15 Consequently, the number of
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new accesses
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14
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Load time is divided into elemental and coverage related load
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time. Elemental load time varies with the number of pieces being
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loaded. Coverage related load time is the fixed portion of load
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time at a stop; it varies with the number of stops. Thus, it is
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partly variable and partly fixed.
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15
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A stop consists of one or more possible deliveries. For example,
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a 5 unit apartment house with a cluster of 5 mail boxes would be
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one stop and 5 possible deliveries.
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caused by an increase in volume would be small. Regression
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analysis of carrier street data indicates that at the current
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volume, the variability of access cost is about 6 percent. In other
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words, a 10 percent increase in volume will yield a
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0.6 percent increase in the number of accesses.
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The Postal Service regularly collects a representative sample of
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street delivery costs, volumes, and delivery point characteristics
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for city delivery carriers. The Postal Service's FY 1993 data set
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contains observations from about 300 routes.16 Observed every two
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weeks over a one year period, data is collected from about 270,000
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stops. This data is used to model the behavior of access costs.
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The coverage function shown in Figure 1 models the change in the
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percentage of possible stops that are accessed on a route as a
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result of changes in volume. 17 Marginal access cost can be
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estimated from the coverage function. As volume per stop grows and
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coverage approaches 100 percent, the volume variability of access
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cost approaches zero. As the volume per stop declines, coverage
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declines, and the volume variability of access costs rises.
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Measure of Scale Economies
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Our methodology for measuring scale economies essentially
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compares the cost of providing delivery by a single firm with the
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cost of providing delivery by two firms.18 We measure the returns
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to scale in the U.S. postal delivery function by first determining
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the total cost of delivery provided by the Postal Service. Next, we
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determine the total cost of delivery performed by the incumbent and
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a second firm that is assumed to be equally efficient. We assume
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that the two firms share the market equally, each delivering a
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random half of the mail. Further, each firm serves
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16
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See the testimony of U.S. Postal Service witness Bradley in
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Docket No. R94-1 (USPS-T-5) at pp. 5-10.
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17
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The Postal Service developed the coverage function and first
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used it in the Docket No. R76-1 rate case. For this paper we have
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altered the Service's model slightly. Unlike the Postal Service's
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model, all stop types and mail classes are consolidated.
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18
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Of course, the cost of providing delivery by a single firm could
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also be compared with the cost of three or more firms. This would
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simply inflate the measure of scale economies.
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the entire country each delivery day. Thus, each firm would have
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to incur the same route time costs that the incumbent currently
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incurs. Since each firm will have only half the volume, the number
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of accesses by each firm will be less than the incumbent currently
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experiences. The number of total accesses by the two firms will,
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however, be greater than the total experienced by the incumbent
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alone. This is because some stops receiving multiple pieces will
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receive delivery from both firms. We assume here that both firms
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provide the same frequency of delivery (daily).19
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Since route time is essentially fixed,20 it would double with
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two firms providing service, each with half the volume. Conversely,
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because load time is 100 percent variable with volume, it would not
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change, since total volume is assumed not to change. Access cost
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would fall somewhere in between, since it is partly variable and
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partly fixed. Access cost variability is estimated from the
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coverage function shown in Figure 1. Under the duopoly scenario
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described, it would grow by 61 percent. Given these responses to
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volume, total street time cost would increase from $10 billion to
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$16.1 billion. The difference, $6.1 billion, represents an upper
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bound on the benefits from scale economies of delivery.21
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Monopoly Rents and Inefficiencies
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In 1993, the average U.S. postal worker subject to collective
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bargaining received $35,001 in pay and allowances, and an
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additional $7,713 in fringe benefits.22 To put these earnings into
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perspective, the median annual earnings
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19
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A niche incumbent might provide delivery less frequently or to a
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subset of possible stops. These would be special cases of the more
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general case analyzed here.
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20
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The slight variability the Commission has found in route time is
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ignored here for convenience.
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21
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Ceteris paribus, less efficient postal services do not have
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greater scale economies than more efficient ones. Theoretically
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scale economies in delivery are not firm specific. They are a
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product of the territory served and the current state of technology
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which would be employed by an efficient firm. The $6.1 billion
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figure is inflated by any inefficiency and/or wage premium which
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characterize the
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U.S. Postal Service and in that sense it is an upper bound.
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22
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The fringe benefit figure excludes unfunded civil service
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retirement liability, certain annuitant benefits, workers
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compensation, unemployment compensation, repriced annual leave,
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bonuses and awards.
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(without fringe benefits) was $24,076 for full-time U.S. workers
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in that year.23 Michael B. Wachter of the University of
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Pennsylvania and his colleagues conclude that there is a wage and
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fringe benefit premium for the postal bargaining labor force of
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29.5 percent with respect to comparable workers in the private
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sector.24 Such a wage premium would amount to $9 billion in
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monopoly rents for the entire postal system. Wachter's $9 billion
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system-wide wage premium exceeds the $6.1 billion delivery scale
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economy by $2.9 billion. Wachter's wage premium for the delivery
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network alone, however, amounts to only $2.3 billion which is $3.8
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billion less than the value of the scale benefit from delivery.
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Unlike labor costs, technical inefficiency of the Postal Service
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has not been analyzed. There is, however, some indirect evidence of
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inefficiencies in the Postal Service. Since 1970, total factor
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productivity has increased at an average annual rate of only 0.4
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percent. This is in spite of the fact that little mechanization
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existed in the Postal Service prior to 1970 and large amounts were
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added in the 1970s. Beginning in the early 1980s and continuing to
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the present, about $5 billion has been invested to automated mail
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processing, including the in-office carrier sequence function and
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forwarding for undeliverable-as-addressed mail. Additional billions
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have been invested in buildings, in part to house the automation.
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In spite of this investment, productivity appears to have increased
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only in response to hiring freezes, or reductions in the average
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wage and fringe benefit package caused by special circumstances. 25
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26
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23 Statistical abstracts of the U.S., Table 665, 1994.
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24
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"The Comparability of U.S. Postal Service Wages and Benefits to
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the Private Sector: Evidence from the Total Compensation Premium,
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New Hire Increases, Quit Rates and Application Rates," Michael L
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Wachter, Barry T. Hirsch, and James W. Gillula, July 10, 1995. Dr.
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Wachter has published a number of studies on the Postal Service's
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labor costs under contract to the USPS. Critics of previous Wachter
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studies claim that they ignore the fact that the Postal Service
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pays minorities the same as it pays white males. The critics argue
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that it is the Postal Service's minority employees (not white male
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employees) who earn more than their private sector equivalents, and
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this only means that the Postal Service does not discriminate. 25
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See "A study of U.S. Postal Service Productivity and Its
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Measurement," Staff Study of the Postal Rate Commission, May 9,
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1990.
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26
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Other indications of inefficiency are management claims that
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work rules are unnecessarily restrictive and that 73,075 grievances
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were filed by employees in FY 1995 and not resolved at the local
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level. In addition, the Postal Service has failed to capture a
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large market share in two areas of direct competition with the
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private sector which are relatively unaffected by the Private
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Express Statutes; Parcel Post and Express (overnight) Mail. This
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may have been in part caused by either a wage premium or technical
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inefficiencies or a combination of both. The Postal Service argues
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that a
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Figure 2 presents the consumer benefit from delivery scale
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economies net of inefficiencies which are expressed as a percentage
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of total postal costs. The top curve incorporates any wage premium
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the Postal Service may have, the bottom curve nets out Wachter's
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29.5 percent wage premium. The top curve shows that if the Postal
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Service has 0 percent inefficiencies with its current wage premium,
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the measure of scale economies equal $6.1 billion. If the Postal
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Service were about 13 percent inefficient, there would be zero net
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scale benefit. The bottom curve shows that at 0 percent
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inefficiencies, the net scale benefit is -$2.9 billion if the value
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of scale is adjusted for Wachter's wage premium. Any inefficiency
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would exacerbate the loss. If the wage premium is accurately
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calculated by Professor Wachter, it would be difficult to defend
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the U.S. postal monopoly on purely economic grounds. Moreover,
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understanding the net economic cost of the monopoly allows one to
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see how much universal service costs postal customers, at least
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under current institutional arrangements.
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Figure 3 presents the same information considering the street
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function alone. Wachter's wage premium amounts to only $2.3 billion
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for the delivery function alone. Thus, the net scale benefit is
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initially positive, whether or not we adjust for the wage
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premium.
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It is far more likely that a monopoly for delivery alone would
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produce net benefits for consumers than would a monopoly that
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included processing and transportation as well as delivery. This
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result lends support to the Panzar's suggestion of opening
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processing and transportation to competition while maintaining a
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monopoly in delivery.
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lack of pricing flexibility has contributed to the Postal
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Service's failure. Others argue that the quality of service,
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product features, and underlying cost of these Postal Service's
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offerings make them uncompetitive.
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Barriers to Entry
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Because a large proportion of street costs are fixed,27 the unit
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(per piece) street cost initially declines rapidly as volume
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increases and continues to decline at a decreasing rate. A firm
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with a small share of total volume that competes with an incumbent
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in delivery only, will find its unit cost high relative to the
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incumbent, even if the competitor pays no wage premium and or is
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more efficient. A competitor can reduce its fixed costs by reducing
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the level of service (i.e., deliver less frequently than the
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incumbent). Many First-Class mailers do not require daily delivery
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and most advertising mailers do not require daily delivery.
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While it may be politically difficult, incumbent postal
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administrations have the possibility of reducing delivery
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frequency. Table 3 displays the cost savings if the
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U.S. Postal Service were to reduce delivery frequency. The
437
savings are substantial relative to the current $10 billion
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delivery costs. They are not so substantial when considered in the
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context of the total Postal Service expenditure in 1993 of $48
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billion.
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Table 3 Cost of Delivery Frequency
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Table 4 illustrates how difficult it would be to enter the U.S.
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delivery market.28
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The table displays the market share that a competitor would have
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to capture in order
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27
448
In the U.S., about 71 percent of street cost are fixed.
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28
450
Over and above the problems discussed here, the U.S. mail box
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law represents a huge barrier to entry. The law forbids any private
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party from placing anything in a receptacle used to deliver mail to
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a residence or business.
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to have the same unit costs as the U.S. Postal Service. For
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example, if a competitor delivered six days a week and its combined
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wage and efficiency advantage is 50 percent, the competitor would
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have to capture 35 percent of the total market in order to have the
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same unit delivery cost as the Postal Service. Even if this
459
competitor delivered only one day per week, it would have to
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capture 15 percent of the total market in order to have the same
461
unit delivery cost as the Postal Service on a national basis. This
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is about 27 billion pieces per year or 519 million pieces per week.
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Assuming a competitor would capture volume slowly and would have to
464
charge rates no higher than the incumbent, the competitor would
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have to be ready to sustain large loses before it could break even.
466
Thus, the effects of economies of scale in delivery present
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significant barriers to entry.
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Table 4 Break-Even Market Share for Competitors
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Competitor Combined Wage and Efficiency Advantage
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471
472
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An International Comparison of the Values of Scale in Delivery
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with Wage Premiums
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As mail volume increases in postal systems, variable costs
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(processing and transportation) increase and fixed costs decrease
477
as a percentage of total costs. Therefore, street delivery costs,
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which are largely fixed, decrease as a percentage of total costs as
479
volume increases. Route time cost, which is a fixed cost and the
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largest component of street delivery costs, decreases with a rise
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in volume. The fixed access cost as a percentage of total cost
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would increase with volume until all stops are covered while the
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variable access cost percentage decreases as volume increases.
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Figure 4 shows these relationships for the U.S. Postal Service
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costs.
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Conversely as volumes decrease, fixed costs become a higher
487
percentage of total costs. For example, if the U.S. Postal Service
488
volume were one third of the 1993 level, then delivery costs as a
489
percentage of total costs would increase from approximately 21
490
percent to 36 percent of total costs. In equally efficient but
491
smaller volume postal systems, street delivery costs should also be
492
a much greater percentage of total costs than the 21 percent in the
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U.S. Postal Service.
494
Table 5 displays the implied coverage, the percentage of total
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cost represented by street delivery cost, and the percentage of
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total cost represented by fixed delivery cost for the 21 countries
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based on their respective per capita volume in 1988. 29 For
498
example, Germany had about 230 pieces per capita which yields a
499
coverage of about 64 percent. Its per capita volume and
500
corresponding coverage imply that its fixed portion of delivery
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equaled about 19 percent of its total costs. The U.S., by
502
comparison, had about 535 pieces per capita and had 91 percent
503
coverage for 1988. Thus, the fixed portion of delivery in the U.S.
504
amounted to about 14 percent of total cost. The implied coverages
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range from 16 percent to nearly 100 percent. The implied
506
proportions of fixed delivery cost tot total cost ranged from 12
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percent to 43 percent.
508
This assumes that the coverage function (Figure 1), developed
509
from an analysis of delivery routes in the U.S., is valid for the
510
other countries included in this analysis.
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512
Table 5 Fixed Delivery Costs
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514
Note: Assumes fixed costs are incurred only in the delivery
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function. All other functions are assumed to vary with volume.
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For each of the 21 countries in the international data set
517
described above, we calculate the value of scale in the delivery
518
function using the same approach we used for the U.S. with a slight
519
modification. For the U.S., we calculate the value of scale by
520
comparing the cost of a hypothetical duopoly with the cost of a
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monopoly. This is calculated using volume per possible stops data
522
and the coverage function. For the other 20 countries, we use a
523
slightly different approach because detailed street delivery cost
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and point of delivery data are not available. We use volume per
525
capita as a proxy for pieces per possible stop and assume that the
526
street delivery cost to total cost relationship of the U.S. is the
527
same for the other 20 countries. See the Technical Appendix for a
528
more detailed discussion of the methodology.
529
Using the 1988 data, we use the per capita volume for each
530
country to approximate pieces per possible stop. We assume a direct
531
linear relationship between volume per capita and pieces per
532
possible stop. Using the estimates of pieces per possible stop for
533
each country, we then calculate the monopoly and the duopoly costs
534
based on the U.S. costs. We then take the ratio of the value of
535
scale to the monopoly cost and multiply that ratio by the actual
536
total costs for each country to estimate the value of scale for
537
each country.
538
For example, for the United Kingdom, the value of scale is about
539
$4.46 billion using the U.S. model. In 1988, the total cost for the
540
Postal Service was about $36.5 billion. When we adjust the total
541
cost for the United Kingdom's coverage level, the total cost would
542
be about $26.7 billion. If we assume that all cost segments other
543
than street delivery vary with volume, the value of scale is about
544
17 percent of the total cost at the United Kingdom's volume and
545
coverage levels. We then apply the 17 percent estimate to the
546
United Kingdom's actual total cost for 1988 ($6.58 billion) to
547
calculate the value of scale.30 The value of scale for the United
548
Kingdom is about $1.1 billion. Table 6 displays the estimates of
549
value of scale for the 21 countries in our data set. The value of
550
scale ranges from $14 million for Luxembourg to $4.5 billion for
551
the U.S.
552
A measure of a wage premium can be calculated for each country
553
by comparing the postal hourly wage with the average manufacturing
554
wage in that country.31 It should be noted that Belgium, Finland
555
and Spain have a negative wage premium according to this measure.
556
The net value of scale is the difference between the value of scale
557
and the wage premium.
558
30
559
The total costs for national postal systems other than the U.S.
560
are expressed in purchasing power parities.
561
31
562
The postal data for calculating the wage premium comes from the
563
above mentioned paper. The private sector data comes from
564
International Comparisons of Hourly Compensation Costs for
565
Production Workers in Manufacturing, 1993, U.S. Department of
566
Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Report 873, June 1994.
567
Table 6 Comparison of Value of Scale in Delivery with the Wage
568
Premium in 21 National Postal Systems ($ millions - 1988)
569
570
Note: Expressed in U.S. dollars based on purchasing power
571
parities.
572
If the wage premium measure is valid, then seven countries have
573
a wage premium alone which exceeds the value of scale in the
574
delivery function; Australia, Austria, France, Japan, Luxembourg,
575
Switzerland and the United States.
576
In these countries, it appears that it would be difficult to
577
justify a postal delivery monopoly based on economic grounds.
578
Better understanding of inefficiencies in national postal systems
579
would allow further evaluation of the economic basis for the postal
580
monopoly in the remaining countries.32
581
Sweden and Finland do not have legal monopolies.
582
583
584
TECHNICAL APPENDIX
585
A. Estimating the Coverage Function
586
1. Data
587
We use the FY 1993 data from the Postal Service's City Carrier
588
System (CCS) to model the behavior of access costs. The CCS data
589
base contains a representative sample of street delivery costs,
590
volumes, and delivery point characteristics for city delivery
591
carriers. The CCS FY 1993 data set contains observations from about
592
300 routes. The Postal Service sampled each route every two weeks
593
over a one year period resulting in about 8,000 route-level
594
observations.
595
2. The Coverage Model
596
For this paper, we use a nonlinear regression model that
597
establishes the relationship between volume and coverage. We define
598
"coverage" as the percentage of stops on a route that receive mail.
599
It has been well established that route coverages relate directly
600
to the fixed and variable nature of access cost. The coverage model
601
specification is as follows:
602
COVi = 1 - e -b*PPSi (1)
603
where, COVi = ASi / PSi ASi = Number of actual stops on route i
604
PSi = Number of possible stops on route i PPSi = Number of pieces
605
per possible stop on route i
606
Since coverage cannot exceed 100 percent, we have specified an
607
exponential function. The regression results from the model are
608
highly significant. The estimated coefficient, b, is 0.6587.
609
B. Measure of Scale Economies
610
1. Scale Economies for the U.S.
611
We measure the returns to scale in the U.S. postal delivery
612
function by first determining the total cost of delivery provided
613
by the Postal Service:
614
SCm = RCm + ECm + fm * ACm + vm * ACm (2)
615
where,
616
SCm = street delivery cost
617
RCm = route time cost
618
ECm = elemental load cost
619
ACm = access cost (also includes coverage-related load cost)
620
vm = variable portion of access cost = ((e -b*PPS * (b * PPS) /
621
(1 - e -b*PPS))) fm = fixed portion of access cost = (1 - vm) m =
622
designates the monopoly case
623
For the year 1993, street delivery cost totaled about $10.07
624
billion:
625
SCm = RCm + ECm + fm * ACm + vm * ACm (2)
626
= 2.95 + 1.91 + 0.8 (5.20) + 0.2 (5.20)
627
= 10.07
628
Next, we determine the total cost of delivery performed by the
629
Postal Service and a second firm that we assume to be equally
630
efficient. We calculate the cost for each of the two firms in our
631
hypothetical duopoly by adjusting equation (2):
632
SCfirmi = RCm + 0.5 * ECm + ffirmi * ACfirmi + vfirmi * ACfirmi
633
(3)
634
where, SCfirmi = street delivery cost for firm i ACfirmi =
635
access cost for firm i = ACm * NCOV NCOV = new coverage a duopoly
636
firm i = 1 - (COVm - COVd)
637
COVm = coverage for a monopoly = 1 - e -b*PPS
638
COVi = coverage for a duopoly firm i = 1 - e -b*PPS/2
639
vfirmi = variable portion of access cost = ((e -b*PPS/2 * (b *
640
PPS/2) / (1 - e -b*PPS/2))) ffirmi = fixed portion of access cost =
641
(1 - vfirmi)
642
The total delivery cost for the duopoly market is simply
643
SCduopoly = 2 SCfirmi (4)
644
For the year 1993, total street delivery costs for the
645
hypothetical duopoly in the U.S. are as follows:
646
SCfirmi = RCm + 0.5 * ECm + f * ACfirmi + v * ACfirmi (3) = 2.95
647
+ 0.5 (1.91) + 0.52 (4.19) + 0.48 (4.19) = 8.098
648
SCduopoly = 2 SCfirmi (4) = 2 * 8.098 = 16.2
649
Value of Scale= SCduopoly - SCm = 16.2 - 10.1 = 6.1
650
The value of scale in the U.S. is approximately $6.1 billion. In
651
1993, the total cost for the Postal Service was about $48.2
652
billion. If we assume that all cost segments other than street
653
delivery (i.e., in-office delivery, mail processing,
654
transportation, retail services, and other costs) vary with volume,
655
the value of scale amounts to about 13 percent of the total
656
cost.
657
2. Scale Economies for 21 Postal Systems1
658
For each of the 20 countries (other than the U.S.) described
659
above, we use a slightly different approach because detailed street
660
delivery cost and point of delivery data are not available. We use
661
volume per capita as a proxy for pieces per possible stop and
662
assume that the street delivery cost to total cost relationship of
663
the U.S. is the same for the other 20 countries.
664
First, we use volume per capita for each country to approximate
665
pieces per possible stop. We assume a direct linear relationship
666
between volume per capita and pieces per possible stop:
667
PPSi = (VCi / VCu.s.) * PPSu.s. (5)
668
where, PPSi = Average pieces per possible stop for country i
669
PPSu.s. = Average pieces per possible stop for the U.S. VCi =
670
Volume per capita for country i VCu.s. = Volume per capita for the
671
U.S.
672
For the United Kingdom, for example, we estimate an average of
673
1.8 pieces per possible stop (with a corresponding coverage of
674
about 69 percent):
675
PPSi = (VCi / VCu.s.) * PPSu.s. (5) = (264/536) * 3.66 = 0.49 *
676
3.66 = 1.8
677
1In contrast to the previous section, all data in this section
678
are from the year 1988.
679
Using the estimates of pieces per possible stop for each
680
country, we calculate the monopoly cost and the duopoly cost using
681
equations (2), (3), and (4) based on the U.S. costs. For example,
682
for the United Kingdom, equations (2), (3), and (4) would result in
683
the following results:
684
SCm = RCm + ECm + fm * ACm + vm * ACm (2)
685
= 2.95 + 0.94 + 0.48 (4.08) + 0.52 (4.08)
686
= 7.98
687
SCfirmi = RCm + 0.5 * ECm + f * ACfirmi + v * ACfirmi (3)
688
= 2.95 + 0.5 (0.94) + 0.27 (2.78) + 0.73 (2.78)
689
= 6.22
690
SCduopoly = 2 SCfirmi (4)
691
= 2 * 6.22
692
= 12.44
693
Value of Scale= SCduopoly - SCm
694
= 12.44 - 7.98
695
= 4.46
696
The value of scale is about $4.46 billion using the U.S. model.
697
In 1988, the total cost for the Postal Service was about $36.5
698
billion. When we adjust the total cost for the United Kingdom's
699
coverage level, the total cost would be about $26.7 billion. If we
700
assume that all cost segments other than street delivery vary with
701
volume, the value of scale is about 17 percent of the total cost at
702
the United Kingdom's volume and coverage levels. We then apply the
703
17 percent estimate to the United Kingdom's actual total cost for
704
1988 ($6.58 billion) to calculate the value of scale. The value of
705
scale for the United Kingdom is about $1.1 billion.
706
707
708
709
710
711