Key facts
- US Postal Regulatory Commission does not expect USPS to run out of cash next year.
- Recent financial relief measures have extended the time before potential insolvency.
- USPS faces significant issues that require national attention.
- USPS has reported net losses of approximately $120 billion since 2007.
- USPS is suspending non-essential spending and plans to raise first-class stamp prices to 82 cents.
- Suspending employee pension contributions will conserve $2.5 billion through September 30.
The U.S. Postal Regulatory Commission (PRC) informed lawmakers that the financially troubled U.S. Postal Service (USPS) is not expected to run out of cash next year. Robert Taub, vice chair of the PRC, stated that recent financial relief measures have extended the period before potential insolvency by several years, provided key expenditure decisions are made. However, Taub emphasized that the USPS faces significant issues that require national attention, as the agency's own reform plan has not halted ongoing losses and has slowed mail delivery. Postmaster General David Steiner had previously warned that USPS could face a cash shortage as early as February. The USPS is currently suspending non-essential spending and plans to increase the price of first-class mail stamps to 82 cents from 78 cents, effective July 12. Suspending employer payments for a federal pension program is expected to conserve $2.5 billion through September 30 and potentially $15 billion through 2030. The agency has also hired restructuring advisers and requested additional reforms from Congress. Since 2007, USPS has reported net losses of approximately $120 billion, driven by a sharp decline in first-class mail volume despite maintaining costly nationwide delivery operations.