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kiwiokie kiwiokie is offline
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Join Date: Mar 2008
Location: Tulsa, Oklahoma
Posts: 1,079
Quote:
Originally Posted by techweenie View Post
I think you need to look at the restrictions placed on the USPS by Congress. They have to fund pensions for decades in the future -- by law. No business with that burden would be profitable.

The shift to electronic delivery of messages has impacted USPS more than any other business. They were investigating "certified delivery emails" in 2001 with a company I had an investment in. Not sure why they dropped it. That would have been a lifesaver.
Most companies with defined benefit plans do exactly the same thing. It is not a burden it is the only way to dig your way out of an ever deepening financial hole as more employees retire and live longer. Same challenge as social security - continue to kick the can or bite the bullet and try to do something about it now.

Here is what the GAO says :

http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-13-112

What GAO Found
The Postal Service Retiree Health Benefits Fund (PSRHBF) covered about 49 percent of the U.S. Postal Service's (USPS) $94 billion retiree health benefit liability at fiscal year-end 2012. USPS's deteriorating financial outlook, however, will make it difficult to continue the current prefunding schedule in the short term, and possibly to fully fund the remaining $48 billion unfunded liability over the remaining 44 years of the schedule on which the 2006 Postal Accountability and Enhancement Act (PAEA) was based. The liability covers the projected benefits for about 471,000 current postal retirees and a portion of the projected benefits for about 528,000 current employees; it does not cover employees not yet hired. Under PAEA, USPS is responsible for contributing an additional $33.9 billion to the PSRHBF by fiscal year 2017, including the $11.1 billion USPS has defaulted on over the past 2 years. PAEA also requires the Office of Personnel Management (OPM) to calculate the remaining unfunded liability in 2017 and develop an initial 40-year amortization payment schedule. USPS, however, projects further declines in mail volume and revenues that may continue to limit its ability to prefund the remaining retiree health benefit liability.

GAO's analysis of maintaining current law requirements compared to five alternative approaches showed differing impacts on USPS's future annual payments and unfunded liabilities. For example, three of the approaches--1) the Administration's Approach, 2) Senate Bill (S. 1789) and 3) "Pay-as-You-Go" (no prefunding)--would reduce USPS's annual payments in the short term, thereby easing its immediate cash flow problems and financial losses. However, these approaches would increase USPS's unfunded liability, sometimes substantially, and require larger payments later. Deferring funding could increase costs for future ratepayers and increase the possibility that USPS may not be able to pay for some or all of its liability. Conversely, a fourth approach--the House Bill (H.R. 2309)--and the current law requirement would reduce USPS's unfunded liabilities more aggressively but may result in significantly higher USPS financial losses in the near future. If USPS stopped prefunding and let the existing fund grow with interest, the unfunded liability is projected to significantly increase. Under a fifth approach, if USPS stopped prefunding and used the existing fund to pay current and future premiums, the fund is projected to be exhausted by 2026. Private sector, state, local, and other federal entities are not required to prefund these benefits, though some do so to a limited extent, and most are required to recognize the future costs in their financial reporting."
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Last edited by kiwiokie; 05-29-2013 at 08:03 PM.. Reason: added link to article
Old 05-29-2013, 08:02 PM
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