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US Postal Service seeks to hike stamp prices to 82 cents

By David Shepardson

WASHINGTON, April 9 (Reuters) – The cash-strapped U.S. Postal Service said on Thursday it wants to raise the price ‌of first-class mail stamps to 82 cents from 78 ‌cents effective July 12.

The proposal, which must be approved by the Postal Regulatory Commission, ​would raise overall mailing services prices by 4.8%. USPS has warned it could run out of cash as soon as February.

Earlier this week, USPS won approval from the Postal Regulatory Commission for a temporary 8% price ‌hike for priority mail ⁠and package deliveries, effective April 26, to deal with rising transportation and fuel costs. USPS plans for the ⁠surcharge to be in effect through January 17.

The service has reported net losses of $118 billion since 2007 as first-class mail, its most profitable ​product, has ​fallen to its lowest volume since ​the late 1960s. USPS in ‌February reported a quarterly loss of $1.25 billion.

The commission separately approved USPS’s plan to suspend employer pension contributions starting Friday, which will conserve $200 million in cash every two weeks, or $2.5 billion through September 30.

Reuters also reported USPS struck a deal with Amazon that will see the ‌retailer use the Postal Service for at ​least 1 billion packages a year, ​or 80% of its volume ​last year.

In March, U.S. Postmaster General David Steiner ‌said the Postal Service was hiring ​restructuring advisers to ​help address its mounting financial troubles.

Steiner wants to be able to raise prices over the current 78 cents for first-class mail ​and thinks Americans would ‌be willing to pay 90 or 95 cents per letter, ​when much of the world pays $2 or more.

(Reporting by ​David Shepardson; Editing by Aurora Ellis)

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