{ "id": "IN10960", "type": "CRS Insight", "typeId": "INSIGHTS", "number": "IN10960", "active": false, "source": "EveryCRSReport.com", "versions": [ { "source": "EveryCRSReport.com", "id": 601957, "date": "2018-08-29", "retrieved": "2020-01-02T16:20:53.756499", "title": "Universal Postal Union to Convene an Extraordinary Congress", "summary": "The Universal Postal Union (UPU)\nEstablished in 1874, the Universal Postal Union (UPU) is the primary forum for multilateral cooperation and negotiation of international postal issues among nations worldwide. According to its website, the UPU \u201chelps to ensure a truly universal network of up-to-date products and services.\u201d \nThe primary decisionmaking body of the UPU is the UPU Congress. Normally, the Congress convenes every four years and was next scheduled to meet in 2020. On September 3, 2018, however, the UPU is scheduled to hold an \u201cExtraordinary Congress\u201d for the first time since 1900. This Insight provides a brief introduction to the UPU and its policies regarding two international mail issues that have been the subject of legislation introduced in the 115th Congress: (1) advanced electronic customs data and (2) international mail rates and procedures for establishing terminal dues (i.e., international mail remuneration rates).\nThe UPU and UPU Congress\nThe UPU became a specialized agency of the United Nations in 1948 and currently has 192 member nations. The UPU Congress is the \u201csupreme authority\u201d of the UPU and the primary forum for negotiation among member nations. The 26th UPU Congress was held in 2016 in Istanbul, Turkey. Representatives from each of the UPU\u2019s member nations met to \u201cdecide on a new World Postal Strategy and set the future rules for international mail exchanges.\u201d \nOther UPU Bodies\nBesides the UPU Congress, the UPU consists of these bodies\nThe Postal Operations Council (POC) includes 40 member nations elected during the UPU Congress to handle technical and operational issues.\nThe Council of Administration meets annually to ensure the continuity of the UPU\u2019s work between Congresses. Among other things, it is responsible for the UPU\u2019s budget and accounts. \nThe International Bureau is an administrative body that provides logistical and technical support to the UPU. \nExtraordinary Congress\nAn \u201cExtraordinary Congress\u201d may be convened by request with approval of two-thirds of the current UPU nations. The UPU has convened an Extraordinary Congress on one occasion, in 1900, to commemorate the 25th anniversary of the UPU\u2019s founding. During the 26th Congress, the UPU approved a resolution to convene its second Extraordinary Congress in September 2018. \nInternational Mail: Select Issues for Congress\nBills on international postal issues have been introduced in the 115th Congress, including several that would require the Secretary of State to renegotiate any portion of an existing UPU agreement where the United States\u2019 obligation conflicts with its provisions (e.g., H.R. 5788, S. 372). Although the POC has authority to make select regulatory changes at its annual sessions, changes to the UPU Acts that require ratification by the member nations may be renegotiated only at the quadrennial Congress. The UPU\u2019s 27th Congress is scheduled for 2020. However, the Extraordinary Congress will convene from September 3 to September 7, 2018, in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. \nOn August 23, 2018, President Trump issued a Presidential Memorandum that specified international postal policies and reforms that are \u201cin the interest of the United States.\u201d Many of the policies and reforms listed in the memorandum have been the subject of legislation introduced in the 115th Congress, including (1) rates that do not favor foreign mailers over domestic mailers, (2) terminal dues reform with rates that fully reimburse the United States Postal Service (USPS) for costs, and (3) advance collection of electronic customs data (e.g., H.R. 5524, S. 2638, S. 3057). The President states that future UPU agreements, including those from the upcoming Extraordinary Congress, should be consistent with the policies in the memorandum. \nTerminal Dues and International Mail Rates\nEach UPU member nation selects one\u2014or, in rare instances, more than one\u2014Designated Postal Operator (DPO) to \u201coperate postal services and to fulfill the related obligations arising out of the Acts of the Union on its territory.\u201d The USPS is the DPO for the United States. Terminal dues are payments that the destination DPO (e.g., USPS) collects from the originating DPO (e.g., China Post) for the costs of delivering inbound international letter mail in the destination country (in this example, the United States). \nThe purpose of terminal dues is to compensate the destination country for the costs it incurs. Terminal dues, however, are not calculated based on the actual cost of handling and delivery of the mail in the destination country. Instead, terminal dues are based on the originating country\u2019s economic and postal development. Terminal dues paid by less developed countries are lower than those paid by more developed countries regardless of the actual cost incurred by the destination country. \nThe prices an originating DPO charges its customers for outbound international mail are not the same as the terminal dues it pays the destination DPO. Each member nation is responsible for developing its own policies and regulations to determine the prices its DPO charges consumers for outgoing international mail products. International postal rates may be also set by negotiated service agreements or through a bilateral or multilateral agreement between the USPS and DPOs of one or more UPU member nations. Although terminal dues do not apply to these agreements, a 2017 study commission by the PRC noted that the rates are often the baseline point during negotiations. \nFurther, terminal dues apply only to international letter mail (e.g., letters, postcards, small packets) between DPOs. Terminal dues do not apply to express consignment operators (e.g., UPS, FedEx) or to parcel post, which is priced using a system based primarily on the size and weight of each package. \nAdvanced Electronic Customs Data\nThe UPU\u2019s POC is responsible for developing policies and recommendations regarding advanced electronic customs data. Among other things, the POC has conducted outreach and monitored the legislative developments of UPU member nations regarding advanced electronic data requirements. Additionally, in May 2017, the UPU and the World Customs Organization (WCO) launched a joint WCO-UPU survey to assess nations\u2019 preparedness for \u201ccapturing, sending, receiving and using data in electronic format.\u201d Sharing of advanced electronic customs data is not required under the 2016 UPU agreements for all member nations. However, a WCO-UPU Memorandum of Understanding and the 2018 WCO-UPU Postal Customs Guide note the importance of developing best practices and standards for nations\u2019 collection and sharing of electronic customs data.", "type": "CRS Insight", "typeId": "INSIGHTS", "active": false, "formats": [ { "format": "HTML", "encoding": "utf-8", "url": "https://www.crs.gov/Reports/IN10960", "sha1": "3e3572cde4d0106f0c9c9a236bd1080d2923964a", "filename": "files/20180829_IN10960_3e3572cde4d0106f0c9c9a236bd1080d2923964a.html", "images": {} }, { "format": "PDF", "encoding": null, "url": "https://www.crs.gov/Reports/pdf/IN10960", "sha1": "1d092c1dfa95df6a8111e1870437c82391141e2d", "filename": "files/20180829_IN10960_1d092c1dfa95df6a8111e1870437c82391141e2d.pdf", "images": {} } ], "topics": [] } ], "topics": [ "CRS Insights" ] }