It is highly likely that the government will begin the privatisation of Royal Mail later this year. Along with a sell off comes the real threat of stamp prices hitting £1. Price regulation on most stamps was scrapped to boost its attractiveness to investors. It is also quite possible that Royal Mail’s VAT exemption will become unlawful. Add VAT to just one price increase similar to the last one and the first class stamp would hit 94p.
Mario Dunn is campaign director of Save Our Royal Mail
It is highly likely that the government will begin the privatisation of Royal Mail later this year.
Along with a sell off comes the real threat of stamp prices hitting £1. Price regulation on most stamps was scrapped to boost its attractiveness to investors.
It is also quite possible that Royal Mail’s VAT exemption will become unlawful. Add VAT to just one price increase similar to the last one and the first class stamp would hit 94p.
Those most sensitive to price increases are inevitably those that need the Royal Mail most of all. Job seekers sending CV’s, the elderly or small businesses are the least able to withstand rocketing prices.
The inevitable cost cutting that will follow a sale will also place a big question mark over services to rural areas and the various freepost services for the blind and our forces overseas.
The postal services regulator has been busily working out the true cost of rural services and was considering how acceptable it is for rural services to be cut back. While they would not be so foolish to recommend reductions at this point, there is no doubt that loss making activities will go under the microscope soon after a sale.
Both Royal Mail and the government will claim this is “speculative” or exaggeration. Don’t be fooled by that. Privatisation was going to be the cure all but it hasn’t worked out that way. Our energy bills are at shocking levels and few will claim that the privatisation of the railways has worked out to the advantage of commuters.
Save Our Royal Mail would like ministers to take a step back from a hasty sale. We believe the public want to know how prices can be controlled and rural and freepost services protected if ownership changes. At the moment there are some protections in law, but these are insufficient to stop a privately owned Royal Mail cutting back where it is most needed.
Not everything in life should be defined by its monetary value. Royal Mail is part of the fabric of the nation – we don’t want to see it ripped apart.
If the Royal Mail is sold off affordable prices, rural services and free postal services for our service men and women as well as vulnerable groups will disappear.
The aim of our campaign is to persuade politicians that they must act now and guarantee that these vital services do not disappear. We have the support of groups and individuals representing the countryside, the blind and partially sighted, the elderly and small businesses.
You can help us by getting involved. Use the social networking tools on our site to promote the campaign and most importantly write to your MP setting out your concerns. As our campaign grows so will this site.
Please visit our website, get involved, write to your MP and sign our petition.
27 Responses to “Royal Mail is part of the fabric of the nation – we don’t want to see it ripped apart”
Simon
The true cost of Royal Mail services is paid either way, the only difference is who pays. Why should we pay through taxation rather than through paying the full economic cost on stamps, a solution which would ensure everyone pays according to what they use? Why should people in urban council estates subsidise postal services for those who choose to live out in the sticks?
Simon
The true cost of Royal Mail services is paid either way, the only difference is who pays. Why should we pay through taxation rather than through paying the full economic cost on stamps, a solution which would ensure everyone pays according to what they use? Why should people in urban council estates subsidise postal services for those who choose to live out in the sticks?
Simon
The true cost of Royal Mail services is paid either way, the only difference is who pays. Why should we pay through taxation rather than through paying the full economic cost on stamps, a solution which would ensure everyone pays according to what they use? Why should people in urban council estates subsidise postal services for those who choose to live out in the sticks?
TheLostDisqusUser
Royal Mail have made a BIG mistake… We sent a smallish parcel, which cost £3.15 before and now it’s £6.30!!!! Way to go on pulling online businesses apart!
Nobody important
The estimate that a first class stamp will cost a pound is a gross underestimate.
The first act of a privatised Royal Mail will be to abolish the jewel in the crown of the postal service, universal pricing. As with the privatisation of all other public services, costs will increase and accountability will decrease. Postal delivery will be charged per mile and the service will become unaffordable for many.
There are those who argue that as the Royal Mail doesn’t deliver as many letters as it did in previous years it will never make any money and should be privatised. This is of course a false argument as, due to the internet, people are ordering more items than every before and indeed the cost of parcels is keeping the price of stamps down to a reasonable level. There are those who complain that the cost of pensions for those who work for the Post Office is too high, but of course they ignore the fact that the government has milked hundreds and hundreds of millions of pounds from the service in profits every year. If successive governments had not been so greedy the pension fund would be in surplus.
There are some institutions which define a nation, the NHS and the Royal Mail are two such organisations. They help create a civilised country where people are the benefactors of a joint enterprise.
The Royal Mail must be protected at all costs. This issue is a worthy catalyst for a general strike.