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Protecting competition from the postal monopoly

Protecting competition from the postal monopoly1996

J. Gregory Sidak

About this book

"The Private Express Statutes protect the U.S. Postal Service from competition in the delivery of letter mail. In contrast, few if any corresponding rules protect competition in other areas from the federal government's postal monopoly. Not only are the Postal Service's competitive activities arguably unrestricted by any explicit application of antitrust law, but public ownership and control exempt the Postal Service's actions from the corporate governance that is characteristic of private enterprises. The Postal Service can take advantage of its autonomy and protected letter mail monopoly to subsidize its entry and expansion in competitive markets, such as parcel post and express mail. That raises a fundamental issue: whether Congress's grant of a monopoly to the Postal Service over the delivery of letter mail should be used to restrict or supplant private commerce in other markets." "In this book J. Gregory Sidak and Daniel F. Spulber examine the justifications for the publicly protected postal monopoly and its public ownership and control. On the basis of their economic and legal analysis, the authors demonstrate the need to prevent extension of the postal monopoly into competitive markets."--BOOK JACKET.

Details

First published
1996
OL Work ID
OL2703643W

Subjects

Government business enterprisesGovernment monopoliesManagementPostal servicePrivatizationUnited States Postal ServicePostal service, united states

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Book data from Open Library. Cover images courtesy of Open Library.