U.S. Postal Service Raises Stamp Price by a Penny

Stamps will cost an extra penny starting in January.

October 18, 2011 RSS Feed Print

WASHINGTON, Oct 18 (Reuters) - The cash-strapped U.S. Postal Service  announced on Tuesday a one-cent increase in the cost of mailing a letter, starting in January.

The new prices lift the cost of a first-class stamp to 45 cents starting on Jan. 22, 2012, the first increase in more than two years. [See how to escape the middle-class squeeze.]

The Postal Service is facing a financial crisis because mail volumes have declined as more people use electronic mail or the services of private sector competitors such as FedEx and United Parcel Service. The Postal Service said the cost to mail a postcard will go up three cents to 32 cents, letters to Canada or Mexico will increase five cents to 85 cents, and letters to other international locations will increase seven cents to $1.05.

The agency, which is allowed to raise prices in line with the rate of inflation, said it filed the new prices with the Postal Regulatory Commission on Tuesday. The regulator has 45 days to approve the changes. Until the price changes take effect, consumers can still purchase 44-cent Forever stamps, which do not require additional postage after prices go up.

[See why the mail should come every other day.]

"The overall average price increase is small and is needed to help address our current financial crisis,"said Postmaster General Patrick Donahoe."We continue to take actions within our control to increase revenue in other ways and to aggressively cut costs."

The Postal Service has asked Congress for permission to drastically overhaul its business, including cutting Saturday mail delivery and eliminating a massive annual payment to prefund retiree health benefits. The agency also is studying thousands of post offices and processing facilities for possible closure.

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If the postal service would take more care of the packages they send more people might use them to send there packages. In the last 3 Months I have sent 4 package through the mail and either all or most of the product were damaged worth hundreds of dollars.

Ann Maxwell of FL 11:33AM October 19, 2011

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