Source: Institute for Policy Studies
As postal workers strain to meet demand for deliveries of medicine, food, and other essentials, the U.S. Postal Service is facing potential financial collapse due to plummeting mail revenue. Without a major cash infusion, the USPS is on track to run out of money before theĀ end of September, according to theĀ Postmaster General.
A USPS shutdown would be devastating for the entire country, but especially for theĀ rural communitiesĀ that rely most on a public service with a universal mandate to serve every address, no matter how remote.
A newĀ Institute for Policy Studies reportĀ finds that the 15 most rural U.S. states would face heavy blows to jobs, revenue, mail and package deliveries, and voting rights.
The U.S. Postal Service is a critical source of decent jobs and revenue in rural states
In the 15 states with the largest share of their population in rural areas, more than 75,000 people work directly for the Postal Service ā more than are employed in many other major job categories. The total mailing industry employs nearly 700,000 people and generates more than $150 billion in revenue per year in these heavily rural states. Twelve of these states have larger than average shares of 65 and older residents, a group that tends to rely heavily on USPS for medicine, bill paying, and other services.

Sources: Rural Pop. (2010 Census). USPS employees (2018). State occupational employment (2018).
Rural residents benefit by far the most from the Postal Service universal service mandate
USPS provides service at uniform and reasonable rates, delivering toĀ 157 millionĀ addresses at least six days a week, no matter where they live. The Postal Service uses revenue from more profitable services to cover much more expensive rural services. This allows it to not charge extra for deliveries to remote areas ā unlike private carriers. UPS and FedEx charge more for deliveries to ZIP codes that are home to approximatelyĀ 70 million people, or approximately 21 percent of the U.S. population. Without competition from the public Postal Service, for-profit firms would likely further hike fees or halt deliveries altogether on less profitable rural routes.
Other carriers rely heavily on USPS for ālast mileā rural deliveries
UPS, FedEx, and Amazon rely on the USPS to handle the ālast mileā of their package deliveries, particularly in rural areas where USPS is the only carrier with a door-to-door network. USPS handled an estimatedĀ 55 percentĀ of the final stretch of Amazonās deliveries in 2018. For Fedex, the most recent available estimate is that USPS handledĀ 30 percent of their total ground packages. These figures are no doubt much higher for rural deliveries.
Many rural residents get medicine and other essentials through the mail
Across the country, an estimatedĀ 20 percentĀ of all Americans over 40 who are prescribed medication for a chronic condition get their prescriptions exclusively through the Postal Service. An even greater share of the rural population relies on mail order prescriptions since so many pharmacies in rural communitiesĀ have shut down. Veterans, nearlyĀ one-quarterĀ of whom live in rural communities, receiveĀ 80 percentĀ of their prescriptions through the mail. Under the COVID-19 pandemic, of course, USPS is delivering medicine, food, and other essentials to a much larger swath of the U.S. population. Even in normal times, Alaskan villages, Maine islands, and other remote areasĀ rely on USPSĀ for food and other vital goods.
With less broadband access, rural residents rely more on USPS for bill paying and other first-class mail needs
TheĀ FCC estimatesĀ that 14.5 million rural residents lack broadband access. This suggests that rural residents make up a disproportionate share of the estimatedĀ 18 percentĀ of all Americans who pay their bills by the mail. USPS also allows sending of greeting cards and other first-class mail not handled by UPS or Fedex. USPSĀ has 31,000 post officesĀ in most ZIP codes in America.

Sources: Mailing industry (2019). Over 65 population (2018). Broadband (2020). *Includes mail production and distribution (including USPS and private carriers), as well as jobs related to goods and services advertised and delivered through the mail.
Rural voters benefit significantly from āVote By Mailā systems
Even in ānormal timesā (without a pandemic), many rural residents either must vote by mail or find it much more convenient to do so. InĀ Minnesota, for example, 130,000 people in towns and townships with less than 400 voters automatically get mail ballots because they do not have physical polling sites. Rural votersĀ are older on averageĀ than other voters and oftenĀ have long drivesĀ to their nearest polling places. Vote by mail helps them exercise their fundamental democratic right to vote.
Although bipartisan lawmakers agreed to an emergency direct aid plan in March, President Trump intervened to strip it from the $2.3 trillion stimulus bill andĀ has vowedĀ to block any future proposals for USPS grant aid of the type offered to the airlines, small businesses, hospitals, and Amtrak. Instead, the CARES Act included only the possibility of a $10 billion loan, subject to draconian conditions that the PMG and postal board have thus far rejected.
Trump has repeatedly claimed that the USPS itself is to blame for its financial problems because it loses money on every Amazon package delivery and should simply jack up delivery rates. This claim isĀ completely unfounded.
Report pdf. MoreĀ IPS research on the Postal Service.
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