The price of a British first-class stamp is going up by about a third
at the end of the month, from 46p to 60p, and the price of a
second-class stamp will rise almost 40%, from 36p to 50p.
But the Royal Mail says its "prices are amongst the best
value in Europe". Is this true? It depends how you look at it.
The Royal Mail points out the UK will remain the cheapest place in Europes topost a certain type of letter-
a heavy
letter, weighing between 50g (1.76oz) and 100g (3.53oz), if you post it
second class.
And that's if you adjust the price to take into account the
fact that money goes further in some countries where goods and services
are generally cheap, than it does in others. Goods and services are
relatively expensive in the UK, so the 50p price tag looks cheaper after
the adjustment.
But what if you post a standard letter - just one or two
sheets of paper - first class?
Then UK prices are not among the best value in Europe. In
fact, the UK is among the top 10 most expensive countries, though its
precise position in the top 10 depends on how you do the sums.
f you convert the local price into dollars,
the UK is the fifth most expensive in Europe. The 60p it will soon cost
for a first class stamp is $0.96, behind Finland, Switzerland, Denmark
and, in first place, Norway - where a comparable stamp costs $1.67 (9.5
Kroner).
If you adjust for the relative purchasing power of the
different countries, the UK is in seventh place among European
countries. Ahead of it are Denmark in sixth place, Norway in fifth, then
Poland, Latvia, Slovakia and, in the top spot, Bulgaria. Posting a
letter in Bulgaria only costs 0.85 Lev ($0.68) but to most Bulgarians,
that's a lot.
When the Royal Mail does these calculations, using slightly
different purchasing power calculations, it places the UK in ninth
position.
That's Europe's 10 most expensive countries to post a letter.
What about the world's?
The post office there, Posten Norge, told the BBC its prices reflect
competition from new technology, such as email, and the country's
geography.
"We deliver to almost two million letter boxes six days a
week, in a country with a relatively dispersed population, meaning it is
expensive to distribute mail here," says spokeswoman Hilde
Ebeltoft-Skaurgrud.
"Norway is also one of the countries in Europe where the
volume of mail is dropping most sharply, a trend we cannot reverse. When
volumes fall dramatically, we only have two options - to increase our
prices and adapt our products and services."
Like some other nationalities, Norwegians also complain about
price increases.
"We also have the highest petrol prices in Europe, but if
postal prices keep rising it might soon be cheaper to drive over and
deliver the mail yourself," says one post user, Kjetil Kooyman.
If, once again, you adjust for relative purchasing power,
posting a letter would feel most expensive for people living in Jamaica.
The minimum cost of posting a letter there is 120 Jamaican
dollars ($1.39) - though for that price you can choose a destination not
just within Jamaica, but most of the Caribbean, Central, South America
and North America.
The next most expensive place in the BBC's
survey is Peru. It costs three soles ($1.12) to put a stamp on a
standard long-distance letter. There is no second-class service,
although there is a cheaper regional service which costs 2.4 soles.
"To put it into context, for three soles, an average Peruvian
in a poor neighbourhood could buy a whole meal - let's say soup,
chicken and rice and a soft drink," says the BBC's Mattia Cabitza in
Peru."Or you could travel across the Peruvian capital, Lima, three times in a bus, so that's a lot of money for Peruvians. One third of the population is poor - making less than $3 a day - so if they have to spend a dollar and a few cents just to send a letter, you can imagine it's quite a lot to ask."
Cabitza says that if people want to send heavier mail, like a large parcel, they sometimes put it on the national bus service because it can be a cheaper option.
The BBC contacted the Peruvian postal service, Serpost, for comment, but the staff were on strike. One worker who answered the phone did point out that the organisation has to deliver letters along the Amazon and across the Andes.
No comments:
Post a Comment