Postal Financial Challenges Continue, with Relatively Limited Results from Recent Revenue-Generation Efforts

GAO Study
GAO Study

November 5, 2009

Why GAO Did This Study

The U.S. Postal Service’s (USPS) financial condition and outlook deteriorated significantly during fiscal year 2009. USPS was not able to cut costs fast enough to offset declining mail volume and revenues resulting from the economic downturn and changing mail use. Facing an unprecedented cash shortfall, USPS stated that it would have insufficient cash on hand to make its mandated $5.4 billion payment to prefund postal retiree health benefits that was due by the end of the fiscal year.

WHAT GAO FOUND

USPS’s financial condition for fiscal year 2009 and its financial outlook continue to be challenging:
• In fiscal year 2009, mail volume declined about 28 billion pieces, or about 14 percent, from the prior fiscal year, when volume was about 203 billion pieces; revenue declined from about $75 billion to about $68 billion.

• A looming cash shortfall necessitated last-minute congressional action to reduce USPS’s mandated payments to prefund retiree health benefits by $4 billion. In the absence of congressional action, USPS was on track to lose about $7 billion.

• USPS debt increased at the end of fiscal year 2009 by the annual statutory limit of $3 billion, bringing outstanding debt to $10.2 billion. At this rate, USPS will reach its total $15 billion statutory debt limit in fiscal year 2011.

• USPS projects annual deficits over $7 billion in fiscal years 2010 and 2011, and continuing large cash shortfalls.

Read This GAO Report (PDF)

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