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     What We Could Do with a Postal Savings Bank: Infrastructure that Doesn't Cost Taxpayers a Dime By Ellen Brown Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, September 30, 2013 
	 
	
	The U.S. Postal Service (USPS) is the nation’s second largest civilian 
	employer after WalMart. Although successfully self-funded throughout its 
	long history, it is currently struggling to stay afloat. This is not, as 
	sometimes asserted, because it has been made obsolete by the Internet. In 
	fact the post office has gotten more business from Internet orders than it 
	has lost to electronic email. What has pushed the USPS into insolvency is an 
	oppressive 2006 congressional mandate that it prefund healthcare for its 
	workers 75 years into the future. No other entity, public or private, has 
	the burden of funding multiple generations of employees who have not yet 
	even been born.  
	
	
	The Carper-Coburn bill (S. 1486) is the subject of
	
	congressional hearings this week. It threatens to make the situation 
	worse, by eliminating Saturday mail service and door-to-door delivery and 
	laying off more than 100,000 workers over several years.  
	
	
	The Postal Service Modernization Bills brought by Peter DeFazio and 
	Bernie Sanders, on the other hand, would allow the post office to 
	recapitalize itself by diversifying its range of services to meet unmet 
	public needs.  
	
	Needs that the post office might diversify into include (1) funding the 
	rebuilding of our crumbling national infrastructure; (2) servicing the 
	massive market of the “unbanked” and “underbanked” who lack access to basic 
	banking services; and (3) providing a safe place to save our money, in the 
	face of Wall Street’s new “bail in” policies for confiscating depositor 
	funds. All these needs could be met at a stroke by some simple legislation 
	authorizing the post office to revive the banking services it efficiently 
	performed in the past. 
	
	Funding Infrastructure Tax-free 
	
	In a July 2013 article titled “Delivering 
	A National Infrastructure Bank . . . through the Post Office,” Frederic 
	V. Rolando, president of the National Association of Letter Carriers, 
	addressed the woeful state of US infrastructure. He noted that the idea of 
	forming a national infrastructure bank (NIB) has had bipartisan 
	congressional support over the past six years, with senators from both 
	parties introducing bills for such a bank: 
	
	An NIB would provide a means to channel public funds into regional and 
	national projects identified by political and community leaders across the 
	country to keep the economy healthy. It could issue bonds, back 
	public-private partnerships and guarantee long-term, low-interest loans to 
	states and investment groups willing to rebuild our schools, hospitals, 
	airports and energy grids. An NIB with $10 billion in capital could leverage 
	hundreds of billions in investments.  
	
	What has blocked these bills is opposition to using tax money for the 
	purpose. But Rolando asks:  
	
	[W]hat if we set up the NIB without using taxpayer funds? What if we allowed 
	Americans to open savings accounts in the nation’s post offices and directed 
	those funds into national infrastructure bonds that would earn interest for 
	depositors and fund job-creating projects to replace and modernize our 
	crumbling infrastructure?  
	
	A post office bank . . . would not offer commercial loans or mortgages. But 
	it could serve the unbanked and fund infrastructure projects selected by a 
	non-partisan NIB.   
	
	The Unbanked and Underbanked: A Massive Untapped Market 
	
	The “unbanked” are not a small segment of the population.
	In 
	a 2011 survey, the unbanked and underbanked included about one in four 
	households.  Without access to 
	conventional financial services, people turn to an expensive alternative 
	banking market of bill-pay, prepaid debit cards, check cashing services, and 
	payday loans.  They pay 
	excessive fees and are susceptible to high-cost predatory lenders. 
	
	
	 
	
	Globally, postal banks are major contributors to financial inclusion. 
	Catering to this underserved population is a revenue-generator for the post 
	office while saving the underbanked large sums in fees. Worldwide,
	
	according to the Universal Postal Union, 1 billion people now use the 
	postal sector for savings and deposit accounts, and more than 1.5 billion 
	take advantage of basic transactional services through the post. 
	
	
	According to a Discussion Paper of the United Nations Department of 
	Economic and Social Affairs: 
	
	The essential characteristic distinguishing postal financial services from 
	the private banking sector is the obligation and capacity of the postal 
	system to serve the entire spectrum of the national population, unlike 
	conventional private banks which allocate their institutional resources to 
	service the sectors of the population they deem most profitable. 
	
	 
	
	Expanding to include 
	postal financial services has been crucial 
	
	in many countries to maintaining the profitability of their 
	postal network. 
	Maintaining post offices in some rural or low-income areas 
	can be a losing proposition, so the postal service often 
	cross-subsidizes with other activities to maintain its universal network. 
	
	
	Public postal banks are profitable because their market is large and their 
	costs are low.  The 
	infrastructure is already built and available, advertising costs are 
	minimal, and government-owned banks do not reward their management with 
	extravagant bonuses or commissions that drain profits away. 
	Profits return to the government and the people. 
	
	 
	
	Wall Street Is No Longer a Safe Place to Keep Our Money 
	
	A postal bank could have appeal not just to the unbanked but to savers 
	generally who are concerned about the safety of their deposits. 
	Traditionally, people have deposited their money in banks for three reasons: 
	safety from theft, the convenience of check writing and bill paying, and to 
	earn some interest. Today, not only do our bank deposits earn virtually no 
	interest, but they are not safe from theft – and the prospective thief is 
	Wall Street itself.  
	
	The Financial Stability Board (FSB) in Switzerland has mandated that 
	“systemically important” banks come up with “living 
	wills” stating what they would do in the event of insolvency. The 
	template set out by the FSB is for these too-big-to-fail banks to confiscate 
	their creditors’ funds and convert them to bank equity or stock. Legally, 
	“creditors” include the depositors. In fact
	
	depositors compose the largest class of creditors of any bank.  
	
	In 2009, President Obama agreed along with other G20 leaders to be bound by 
	the regulations imposed by the FSB, giving them the force of law.
	This 
	agreement should properly have been a treaty, subject to the approval of 
	two-thirds of the Senate; but the deal was sealed on a handshake, ostensibly 
	to prevent another Lehman-style banking collapse. Thus the next time 
	JPMorganChase or Bank of America finds itself on the wrong side of a massive 
	derivatives bet, it can avoid insolvency by recapitalizing itself with our 
	deposits.
	
	Both JPM and BOA hold over $1 trillion in deposits and over $70 trillion 
	in derivatives; and with the repeal of Glass-Steagall, the banks have been 
	able to merge these operations. The FDIC deposit insurance fund has only $32 
	billion in it to cover losses for the entire country. 
	
	For guaranteed safety, we need a network of publicly-owned banks devoted 
	solely to taking deposits and providing check-cashing services – no gambling 
	with deposits allowed. The US Post Office can safely and efficiently provide 
	the infrastructure for such a banking network, as it did from 1911 until 
	1967. The post office is ubiquitous, with branches in every town and 
	community.  
	
	A Proven Model 
	
	Postal banking systems are also ubiquitous in other countries, where their 
	long record of safe and profitable public banking has proved the viability 
	of the model. The mother of all postal banks was in Great Britain in the 19th 
	century. The leader today is Japan Post Bank (JPB), now the largest 
	depository bank in the world. Not only is it a convenient place for Japanese 
	citizens to save their money, but the government has succeeded in drawing on 
	JPB’s massive deposit base to fund a major portion of the federal budget. 
	Rather than using its deposits to back commercial loans as most banks do, 
	Japan Post invests them in government securities. That means the government 
	is borrowing from its own bank and its own people rather than from foreign 
	bondholders. 
	
	That is the basic idea behind the national postal savings and infrastructure 
	bank. The deposits of the nation’s savers can be invested in government 
	securities that are in turn used for rebuilding the nation. It is a 
	win-win-win, providing a way to save the post office while at the same time 
	protecting our deposits and rebuilding our decaying roads and bridges 
	without dipping into taxes. It is also a way to vote with our feet, moving 
	our money out of an increasingly risky and rapacious Wall Street into a 
	network of publicly-owned banks that serves rather than exploits us. 
	
	Another Option: Rescind the Prefunding Requirement 
	
	Another alternative for putting the USPS in the black, of course, is simply 
	to rescind the healthcare pre-funding requirement that put it in the red. 
	The mandate to fund healthcare 75 years into the future appears so 
	unreasonable as to raise suspicions that the nation’s largest publicly-owned 
	industry has been intentionally targeted for takedown. Why? Is it because 
	competitors want the business, or because private developers want the 
	valuable postal properties that are being systematically sold off to meet 
	its now-crippled the budget?  
	
	In a revealing exposé in the September 18th East Bay Express,
	
	Peter Byrne provides evidence that C.B. Richard Ellis (CBRE), the 
	company holding the exclusive contract to negotiate sales for the $85 
	billion postal real estate portfolio, has sold off 52 postal properties for 
	at least $79 million less than their fair market value. Worse, the buyers 
	included its own business partners and shareholders, including Goldman 
	Sachs. CBRE is chaired by Richard C. Blum, the husband of US Senator Dianne 
	Feinstein, a family Byrne says has a history of accessing public pension 
	funds to make private investments (citing
	
	here and 
	here). 
	
	The post office has been made to look inefficient and obsolete, as if public 
	enterprises are incapable of generating public revenues; yet the postal 
	service has been both self-funding and profitable for over two centuries. If 
	we refuse to allow our government to make money through public enterprises, 
	we will be destined to bear the burden of supporting government with our 
	taxes, while we watch countries such as China, Korea and Japan, which do 
	allow public industries, enjoy the fruits of that profitable and efficient 
	arrangement. 
	
	______________ 
	
	Ellen Brown is an attorney, president of the
	Public Banking Institute, 
	and author of twelve books including the best-selling 
	Web of Debt. In 
	The Public Bank Solution, 
	her latest book, she explores successful public banking models historically 
	and globally. Her 200-plus blog articles are at
	EllenBrown.com. 
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