This event has been rescheduled from its original date of May 29.
President George W. Bush recently established the Commission on the United States Postal Service, whose final report in August 2003 may lay the groundwork for the first major reform of the U.S. Postal Service in thirty years. Mirroring the administration’s initiative, AEI is sponsoring its own Postal Reform Initiative--a series of conferences and publications to assess the mission and operations of the U.S. Postal Service, propose a vision of a modern postal industry, and suggest how the United States could arrive at this destination. In order to solve the problems that have bedeviled the U.S. postal industry, the AEI project examines the potential of modern communications technology and a more open and competitive market environment and reviews the experiences of other countries that have enacted postal reform in recent years.
With last year’s U.S. court decision finding that the U.S. Postal Service is subject to federal antitrust law, the USPS can no longer claim sovereign immunity to defend itself from accusations of anticompetitive behavior. This third session of AEI’s Postal Service Initiative will focus on the antitrust (or competition) issues that may arise under postal reform.