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British second-class mail deliveries might be ditched on Saturdays

Royal Mail might be permitted to drop secondclass letter deliveries on Saturdays under changes proposed by the regulator Ofcom targeted at protecting the future of Britain's universal postal service.

Royal Mail is owned by International Circulation Services , which has accepted a takeover bid from Czech billionaire Daniel Kretinsky. The British government is scrutinising the 3.57 billion pound offer.

The business has long called for reforms to the nationwide single-price very first- and second-class service obligation, and in April it proposed non-first class deliveries might be minimized to every other weekday.

Ofcom stated on Thursday there was a clear requirement for reform, considered that people were sending far less letters and Royal Mail had been losing numerous millions of pounds.

It said its research study had actually discovered that people wanted a next-day first-class service 6 days a week for urgent mail, however they acknowledged that a lot of letters were not immediate.

If 2nd Class letters continued to be provided within 3 working days but not on Saturdays-- and First Class stayed the same at six days a week-- it would enable Royal Mail to enhance dependability, make substantial effectiveness savings, and redeploy its existing resources to development locations such as parcels, it stated.

However Royal Mail's efficiency need to enhance, it stated.

IDS Group President Martin Seidenberg said letter volumes had actually fallen from their peak of 20 billion to 6.7 billion a year, suggesting the average home now gets simply four letters weekly.

Change can not come quickly enough, he stated, adding that the company's own proposition would safeguard what matters most for consumers.

Shares in IDS rose 1% on Thursday.

Ofcom stated it would consult on detailed proposals next year with a view to making a decision next summer.

(source: Reuters)