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Amazon's USPS subsidy


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2017 Dec 29, 11:36am   7,061 views  38 comments

by MisdemeanorRebel   ➕follow (12)   💰tip   ignore  



Of over $1.30 per package on average. Time to rethink this subsidy.

Why is the United States Post Office, which is losing many billions of dollars a year, while charging Amazon and others so little to deliver their packages, making Amazon richer and the Post Office dumber and poorer? Should be charging MUCH MORE!— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) December 29, 2017




#Politics

« First        Comments 14 - 38 of 38        Search these comments

14   anonymous   2017 Dec 29, 10:04pm  

Sniper says
Just like UPS and Fedex does?? What a novel and a unique concept!! Talk about amazing!!

Yeah, apparently so novel and unique that you failed to mention it.
15   Shaman   2017 Dec 30, 6:44pm  

anon_b8f55 says

Do you want your mail delivered? Perhaps it's worth subsidising. Just a thought


Except that you MISSED the fucking point, that it's the postal service that is subsidizing Amazon with under-charged postal deliveries!

When the government is subsidizing a private company, we as taxpayers should ask why.
16   MisdemeanorRebel   2017 Dec 30, 8:13pm  

Especially since the government's losses are made up by the taxpayer, so it's a wealth transfer from the public to Amazon and their Prime Customers.
17   HappyGilmore   2017 Dec 30, 8:21pm  

I hate to let facts get in the way of a good Trump story, but just for the folks at pat.net who want to actually understand the truth:

https://aircargoworld.com/allposts/trump-says-the-usps-is-getting-a-raw-deal-from-amazon-com-but-its-a-bit-more-nuanced/
"Firstly, the USPS doesn’t operate with tax dollars, meaning that tax payers aren’t subsidizing Amazon’s deliveries. The USPS posted a net income of US$307 million in the first quarter of 2016, the first such gain since 2011, thanks in large part to a 13.5 percent increase in shipping and package revenues.
It also turns out, package delivery is the USPS’ more profitable arm, with earnings actually subsidizing rural mail delivery operations, which are mostly unprofitable. In its 2017 fiscal year report, the USPS attributed its losses to declines in first class mail and marketing mail volumes. On the flip side, the USPS said that “the growth in our Shipping and Package business provided some help to the financial picture… as revenues increased by $2.1 billion, or 11.8 percent.” If the USPS wants to pursue profitability, it needs partnerships like the Amazon.com deal."
18   anonymous   2017 Dec 30, 10:27pm  

Quigley says
anon_b8f55 says

Do you want your mail delivered? Perhaps it's worth subsidising. Just a thought


Except that you MISSED the fucking point, that it's the postal service that is subsidizing Amazon with under-charged postal deliveries!

When the government is subsidizing a private company, we as taxpayers should ask why.

I didn’t miss the point. I was making an additional one. It’s highly likely that USPS would be able to turn a regular profit without having control of its own prices. That’s the choice - subsidize or allow it to set its own prices and see if it can turn a profit. If it doesn’t, then no doubt it will have to be subsidized as people need a mail service.
19   anonymous   2017 Dec 30, 10:27pm  

And before all the usual suspects jump in, I’d just like to clarify that my comment about subsidizing wasn’t meant to refer to Amazon. It was in reference to the continued need for a postal service even if it can’t turn a profit - it is of national importance after all.
20   HappyGilmore   2017 Dec 31, 8:45am  

If people really want the USPS to stop losing money, we need to focus on the real problems with the business plan. Package delivery is profitable and subsidizes the rest of the business. 6 day/week delivery of mail to rural areas is why the USPS loses money. A couple ideas (not mine) that make sense:

1. Reduce mail service to 5 days/week
2. Impose a surcharge on rural addresses to cover the additional costs incurred in making their service.
21   anonymous   2017 Dec 31, 10:29am  

justme says

But as always, I wonder what the Trump real motivation is.


How is this difficult to ascertain? Trump wants the American people to stop hemorrhaging money into the pockets of billionaires. Simple, easy, and obvious.
22   anonymous   2017 Dec 31, 10:29am  

BorderPatrol says
Washington post. Sounds like they have done way too much real journalism


I can't tell if you are joking. WashPo is a CIA propaganda machine. It is misinformation and an enemy of the people
23   HappyGilmore   2017 Dec 31, 10:34am  

anon_4480e says
How is this difficult to ascertain? Trump wants the American people to stop hemorrhaging money into the pockets of billionaires. Simple, easy, and obvious.


If that were the case, he wouldn't have signed the tax bill.
24   MrMagic   2017 Dec 31, 1:23pm  

HappyGilmore says
anon_4480e says
How is this difficult to ascertain? Trump wants the American people to stop hemorrhaging money into the pockets of billionaires. Simple, easy, and obvious.


If that were the case, he wouldn't have signed the tax bill.


Exactly, because it's clear as day, not a single middle class American will get a tax savings with that new tax bill, right HappyGilmore/JoeyJoey/Tattup70?

Oh, wait.... the majority WILL get a tax savings... damn Trump...
25   HappyGilmore   2017 Dec 31, 4:25pm  

Sniper says
Exactly, because it's clear as day, not a single middle class American will get a tax savings with that new tax bill, right HappyGilmore/JoeyJoey/Tattup70?

Oh, wait.... the majority WILL get a tax savings... damn Trump...


Yep, the average middle class family will get a couple hundred while the average rich will get tens of thousands. That's called hemorrhaging money into the pockets of billionaires.
26   Shaman   2017 Dec 31, 5:35pm  

HappyGilmore says
Yep, the average middle class family will get a couple hundred while the average rich will get tens of thousands


That’s how percentages work.
Duh!
3% tax break of 30k is $900.
3% tax break on $1,000,000 is 30k.
Whose taxes got cut more?
Neither, both got the same tax cut. It was just worth more to the big earner.
27   CBOEtrader   2017 Dec 31, 10:54pm  

HappyGilmore says
If that were the case, he wouldn't have signed the tax bill.


The billions paid out in Xmas bonuses and the economy both disagree w you. Facts are a pesky thing
28   MrMagic   2018 Jan 1, 10:40am  

Quigley says
HappyGilmore says
Yep, the average middle class family will get a couple hundred while the average rich will get tens of thousands


That’s how percentages work.
Duh!
3% tax break of 30k is $900.
3% tax break on $1,000,000 is 30k.
Whose taxes got cut more?
Neither, both got the same tax cut. It was just worth more to the big earner.


Very good point Quigley!!!

Let's go one step further:

The $30,000 guy will pay 12% in taxes = $3,600. (his $900 savings is 25% of his new tax bill)
The $1,000,000 will pay 37% in taxes = $370,000. (his $30,000 savings is only 8% of his new tax bill)

Which one gets a bigger tax savings as a percentage of their taxes?

Question for yo-u HappyGilmore/JoeyJoey/Tattup70, since both have access to the same government services, and the government pays their bills with dollars, which guy pays MORE than his fair share for those services?
29   MrMagic   2018 Jan 1, 11:03am  

HappyGilmore/JoeyJoey/Tattup70 also please tell us is it the middle class guy who's getting a bigger tax savings or the "rich" guy?
30   anonymous   2018 Jan 2, 5:42am  

30,000 > 900
Pretty simple math for any Great American
31   MrMagic   2018 Jan 2, 8:15am  

errc says
30,000 > 900
Pretty simple math for any Great American


Yes, paying $3,600 versus $370,000 in taxes is simple math for any Great American.

Unfortunately, there are a few here that can't do simple math, and have to rely on drinking the kool-aid served by the Liberal media for those math skills.

So sad.
32   HappyGilmore   2018 Jan 2, 9:31am  

Quigley says
That’s how percentages work.
Duh!
3% tax break of 30k is $900.
3% tax break on $1,000,000 is 30k.
Whose taxes got cut more?
Neither, both got the same tax cut. It was just worth more to the big earner.


First off, middle class for a family of 4 is $48K to $144K so let's be conservative and use $75K. And a few hundred isn't $900.

So, let's do this again. 3% of 75K = $2,250, but instead they are getting a few hundred which is .4%

So, rich are getting 7.5 times as much benefit as middle class.
33   MrMagic   2018 Jan 2, 11:42am  

HappyGilmore says
First off, middle class for a family of 4 is $48K to $144K so let's be conservative and use $75K. And a few hundred isn't $900.

So, let's do this again. 3% of 75K = $2,250, but instead they are getting a few hundred which is .4%


Wrong again....

Their tax rate in 2017 is 15%, for the new tax bill in 2018, it drops to 12%. So math for simple minds, 15 - 12 = 3%. So they're getting a 3% savings.

Their tax savings next year is $2,250 (3% of $75K), NOT a few hundred. That $2,250 is a over 20% savings on their new $9,000 tax bill, NOT .4%. Where did yo-u learn math????

HappyGilmore says
So, rich are getting 7.5 times as much benefit as middle class.


Why do yo-u KEEP repeating the same lies???

Sniper says
The $1,000,000 will pay 37% in taxes = $370,000. (his $30,000 savings is only 8% of his new tax bill)


HappyGilmore/JoeyJoey/Tattup70, which is a larger savings, 20% or 8%?? Maybe Marcus can help yo-u with that math.
34   anonymous   2018 Jan 2, 12:26pm  

Sniper says
The $1,000,000 will pay 37% in taxes = $370,000


Spoken like someone who doesn't know how taxes are calculated. Are you sure they pay $370k? I'm sure you are wrong.
35   anonymous   2018 Jan 2, 4:41pm  

Why would anyone think taxes are simple math?
36   anonymous   2018 Jan 2, 4:41pm  

Sniper says
The $1,000,000 will pay 37% in taxes = $370,000



You do know that someone making a million dollars doesn't pay 37% on the whole million .... Right? First it depends on filling status then you pay % for each bracket. Everybody pays 10% on the first bracket of $. Even the person making a $1,000,0000. But you knew this. Right? Simple math right?

Why do you assume that savings only come in the %'s on brackets? Top 1% don't generally get paid on a w-2 either so saying this is simple math is wrong.
37   anonymous   2018 Jan 2, 4:41pm  

Sniper says
Their tax rate in 2017 is 15%, for the new tax bill in 2018, it drops to 12%. So math for simple minds, 15 - 12 = 3%. So they're getting a 3% savings.


Both the person making $1 million and the person making $30k both pay 12% on that bracket of money. So there is no reason to subtract 15-12 because the 3 % tells us nothing.
38   MrMagic   2018 Jan 2, 7:02pm  

anon_13ce6 says
Top 1% don't generally get paid on a w-2 either so saying this is simple math is wrong.


Really, Vice Presidents and CEOs don't get paid any salary or bonuses on a W-2? Care to back that up with FACTS?

anon_13ce6 says
Both the person making $1 million and the person making $30k both pay 12% on that bracket of money. So there is no reason to subtract 15-12 because the 3 % tells us nothing.


Not even close. Nice try.

What I see here is a bunch of Liberal parrots trying to justify a narrative using straw men, since their twisted narrative is blown.

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