banco55 said:
a)it would have a guaranteed monopoly for the next 20 years
Probably not a good thing for competition's sake and competition is desirable here.
banco55 said:
b)it would have the universal service obligation for the next 20 years
This would make it harder to sell (any businessman is less inclined to buy into a project if he knows he could be stuck with it for 20 years), which means it's less likely to be bought into. Part of the argument for privatisation rests with the concept that you can increase/decrease your holdings in a business depending on it's good/bad performance, it's an efficient markets thing.
Point is, any kind of government imposed obligation is likely to distort that and I think it'd be unnecessary anyway. A business will step in if there's demand where no current service is available and it's easy enough to provide it (like I said, if Toyota can spend billions and billions on making cars, I'm sure someone will spend the money to make a postal service), we don't need a govt guarantee of things.
It's like saying we need the government to guarantee we need Woolworths to stay in business so we can all buy food. There isn't a guarantee now and things are fine aren't they? The argument for a govt guarantee in an area like postal services is pretty weak imo.
banco55 said:
c)any increase in stamps etc. would have to be approved by a regulator
This could stifle it's ability to compete free of government hands and political influence.
Sexy Ari said:
And anyway, postage services are greatly declining in use per person. I'm sure companies tend to invest billions of dollars into a growing market not a service becoming relatively redundant due to technological advances.
If it were really true that postage services were greatly declining to the extent that they aren't needed anymore, then why must they still be provided in the first place? I think you know the answer here, they're still needed by people and as long as they are still demanded by people there will be enough incentive for a firm to jump into the market.
Sexy Ari said:
Those companies set up overseas manufacturing plants because there is a guaranteed market and way to make profit.
I don't think it's true that there has to be a guaranteed market before a company will jump in, heaps of business ventures are at least somewhat speculative in nature.
Anyway, let the entrepreneurs sort it out, your argument could equally be used for having a govt mandated service in almost any other industry, and yet there are plenty of industries that work fine without the government. eg. Do you think that furniture makers are ever 100% certain that their furniture will be sold? Let's have a government furniture making service "because we aren't sure whether a private furniture company would be profitable".