India post: An agenda for restructuring and commercialization
Description
You can think of India Post as an old fashioned network trapped in the bricks and mortars of a dying mail service; or you can think of it as an extraordinary human network that facilitates incredible access to virtually all Indians', according to Mieko Nishimizu (2002), Vice President, South Asia Region of the World Bank. Both sides of this duality are evident in this brief survey of the current status and prospects for the reform of India Post. To understand India Post, one must begin by placing India itself in perspective. India is the seventh largest country in the world, having an area of about 3.3 million square kilometers. If one superimposes the map of India over that of Europe, India stretches from the Atlantic shore of France in the west to Ukraine in the east and from the Arctic islands of Scandinavia in the north to parts of North Africa in the south. India's population of 1.1 billion people is about one and a half times the population of all of Europe, but 25 percent of its people live on less than one US dollar per day. Yet India Post manages to provide access to all persons living in this vast region, including those who have nebulous addresses. India Post is the largest postal network in the world with 155,699 post offices (March 2006).Â
Copyright Date
April 2008
Publication Date
1-4-2008
Pagination
416-425p.
DOI
10.4337/9781848444904.00032
ISBN
978-1848444904; 978-1847209573
Publisher
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd.
Keywords
Postal services, Postal reforms, Postal Restructuring, Postal Commercialization
Source Link URL
https://doi.org/10.4337/9781848444904.00032