Saving the Post Office: Letter Carriers Consider Bringing Back Banking Services
Sunday, 12 August 2012 00:00
By Ellen Brown, Truthout | News Analysis
On July 27, 2012, the National Association of Letter Carriers adopted a
resolution at their national convention in Minneapolis to investigate
the establishment of a postal banking system. The resolution noted that
expanding postal services and developing new sources of revenue are
important components of any effort to save the public post office and
preserve living-wage jobs; that many countries have a long and
successful history of postal banking, including Germany, France, Italy,
Japan and the United States itself; and that postal banks could serve
the nine million people who don't have a bank account and the 21 million
who use usurious check cashers, giving low-income people access to a
safe banking system. "A USPS [United States Postal Service] bank would
offer a 'public option' for banking," concluded the resolution,
"providing basic checking and savings - and no complex financial
wheeling and dealing."
Sunday, August 19, 2012
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