Order Code RL31684
Report for Congress
Received through the CRS Web
Funding Postal Service Obligations to the
Civil Service Retirement System
Updated March 28, 2003
Patrick Purcell
Specialist in Social Legislation
Domestic Social Policy Division
Nye Stevens
Specialist in American National Government
Government and Finance Division
Congressional Research Service ˜ The Library of Congress

Funding Postal Service Obligations
to the Civil Service Retirement System
Summary
On November 1, 2002, the Office of Personnel Management (OPM) notified the
U.S. Postal Service (USPS) that a review of USPS payments to the civil service
retirement fund for pension obligations to employees on board before 1984 revealed
a much more positive picture than previously believed. USPS – unlike any other
federal agency – is required to pay into the fund an amount that approximates the full
cost of the Civil Service Retirement System. Because past contributions have been
earning interest at a higher rate than presumed in the statutory funding formula, OPM
reported that the deferred liability for pension obligations was only $5 billion instead
of $32 billion. If USPS continues to make payments based on the latter figure, OPM
said the liability will eventually be overfunded by $71 billion. The postmaster
general said that if Congress promptly passes draft legislation developed by OPM to
reduce its annual payment, USPS will be able to reduce its debt by $3 billion in
FY2003, and defer the next postage rate increase from 2004 to 2006.
The General Accounting Office (GAO) reviewed OPM’s figures. GAO pointed
out that OPM had included as a USPS obligation the cost of retirement benefits based
on prior military service of postal employees, although under current law the
Department of the Treasury is responsible for those costs. Together with some other
adjustments, this resulted in a conclusion that the potential overfunding is $103
billion rather than the $71 billion OPM calculated, and that USPS has already
overfunded the part of its obligation that is current. OPM responded that making
USPS responsible for the cost of military service is the practice under dynamic
normal cost principles that apply to the Federal Employees Retirement System.
However, OPM’s accounting differs somewhat from the Administration’s FY2004
budget proposal for federal agencies to fully fund CSRS. The proposed budget
would have agencies begin paying the full dynamic cost of CSRS benefits, but it
would not make all past military service an obligation of each agency, as OPM did
in calculating the Postal Service’s CSRS liabilities.
USPS, OPM, the Office of Management and Budget, the Department of the
Treasury, postal unions, and mailers groups all supported legislation drafted by OPM,
versions of which have been favorably reported by committee in the House as H.R.
735, and in the Senate as S. 380. Both bills added provisions requiring USPS to pay
down its debt to the Treasury with savings from a recalculation of its required
payment. This was apparently in response to a Congressional Budget Office (CBO)
letter warning that returning the savings to mailers in the form of lower rates would
increase deficits or reduce surpluses in the unified budget by as much as $10 billion
to $15 billion over the period from FY2003 to FY2007, possibly requiring offsetting
savings if it is enacted. Both GAO and CBO noted that there still looms an unfunded
liability of $40 billion to $50 billion for retiree health costs.
This report provides background on USPS funding of its retirement obligations,
describes and analyzes the OPM recalculation, and discusses considerations Congress
may bring to bear on H.R. 735 and S. 380. It will be updated in the event of any new
developments.

Contents
Background: USPS Payments for Pensions under CSRS and FERS . . . . . . . . . . . 2
Civil Service Retirement System . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
Federal Employees Retirement System . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
The OPM Analysis of USPS Contributions for CSRS Benefits . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
The interest rate used in CSRS financing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
Estimated amount of future overfunding . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
Limitations of the estimates . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
GAO’s review of the estimates . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
USPS Wants to Reduce Its CSRS Payments to OPM . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
Proposed legislation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
Initial support for the legislation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
H.R. 735 and S. 380 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
Obstacles to the legislation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11

Funding Postal Service Obligations
to the Civil Service Retirement System
The U.S. Postal Service (USPS) faces a long term financial prospect that calls
into question its ability to provide universal service at present levels without using
appropriated funds. Steadily rising costs stemming from the addition of 1.7 million
new delivery points each year, and from an inability to close outmoded facilities or
control its labor contracts, threaten to outstrip revenues. Use of the mail for
correspondence, advertising, package delivery, and financial transactions is declining
in competition with electronic and private sector alternatives. USPS, the General
Accounting Office (GAO), and a growing number of postal stakeholders believe the
postal business model will not work in the 21st century.1 On December 11, 2002,
President Bush appointed a nine-member commission to examine alternative futures
for the Postal Service. The commission is to report by July 31, 2003.
Much of the concern about the Postal Service’s ability to survive has stemmed
from its deferred liabilities. Not only must it recover from ratepayers the direct costs
of delivering their mail in the future, it must also generate enough revenue to pay its
debts built up from infrastructure investments, accumulated losses, and commitments
to retirees and their survivors that were made many years in the past. According to
the GAO, these liabilities and obligations “amount to almost $100 billion and
threaten the Service’s ability to continue to fulfill its mission.”2 Specifically, GAO
identified a deferred liability of $32 billion for pensions, and noted that USPS would
also have to pay $16 billion in interest associated with the pension obligations. GAO
also pointed out, however, that the accounting behind this number was suspect. The
mailing industry found it particularly alarming. One respected analyst warned that
retirement costs could rise to $16 billion annually by 2010 – an amount that
ratepayers would have to pay before devoting a single dollar to salaries,
transportation, or electricity.3
Lately, however, the Office of Personnel Management (OPM) has released a
new analysis of the USPS obligation toward retirees in the Civil Service Retirement
System (CSRS), showing that present contribution rates will overfund the amount
needed to cover that obligation. USPS, supported by most large mailers
organizations, has asked Congress to change the statutory contribution formula in a
1 For a detailed analysis of the USPS financial prospect, see CRS Report RL31069, Postal
Service Financial Problems and Stakeholder Proposals,
by Nye Stevens.
2 U.S. General Accounting Office, U.S. Postal Service: Moving Forward on Financial and
Transformation Challenges
, GAO Testimony 02-694T, May 13, 2002, p. 12.
3 Gene Del Polito, president of the Association for Postal Commerce, as quoted in Tad
Clarke, “Declining Mail Volume Not USPS’ Only Problem, Speaker Says,” DM News,
Sept. 19, 2002, p. 1.

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way that would reduce USPS revenue needs by $2.9 billion in fiscal year (FY) 2003,
and by $2.6 billion in succeeding years. During the last week in January, 2003, both
the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) and GAO issued reports shedding new light
on OPM’s analysis and on the proposed legislation. Bills were introduced in the
House (H.R. 735) and the Senate (S. 380) with bi-partisan sponsorship on February
12, 2003, to change the funding formula.
This report explains these developments and provides information relevant to
Congress’s consideration of the USPS request for statutory relief. It includes as
background an explanation of how USPS pays for pensions under both the Civil
Service Retirement System and the Federal Employees Retirement System (FERS),
and describes both the OPM analysis leading to the conclusion that present
contribution rates are too high, and GAO’s review of the calculations behind that
determination. It concludes with a description of the two bills introduced to change
the contribution formula, and analysis of the various considerations that Congress
might bring to bear on the proposed legislation.
Background: USPS Payments for Pensions
under CSRS and FERS
The Postal Reorganization Act of 1970 (P.L. 91-375) established the United
States Postal Service and provided that “officers and employees of the Postal Service
(other than the Governors) shall be covered by chapter 83 of title 5 relating to civil
service retirement.”4 Consequently, employees of the Postal Service continued to
participate in the Civil Service Retirement System, in which they had participated as
employees of the Post Office Department. Today, federal and USPS employees are
covered under one of two retirement systems, depending on when they were hired.
Employees initially hired into permanent federal or USPS employment before
January 1, 1984 are covered by CSRS. Employees initially hired into permanent
federal or USPS employment after December 31, 1983 participate in FERS. FERS
also covers employees who switched from CSRS during “open seasons” in 1987 and
1998.
The contributions to the Civil Service Retirement and Disability Fund (CSRDF)
required of federal employees and their employing agencies are specified in law.5 All
monies contributed to the fund that are not needed to pay current benefits must be
invested in special-issue securities of the U.S. Treasury.6 By law, the investments of
the fund are credited with interest at a rate equal to the average market yield of
4 See 39 U.S.C. § 1005(d). As amended by the Federal Employees Retirement System Act
of 1986 (P.L. 99-335), this section now says that “officers and employees of the Postal
Service (other than the Governors) shall be covered by chapters 83 and 84 of title 5.”
5 5 U.S.C. 8334, 8422, and 8423.
6 5 U.S.C. 8348(c).

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outstanding obligations of the United States Treasury with remaining maturities of
4 years or more.7
Civil Service Retirement System. The principal objective of the Postal
Reorganization Act was to establish the Postal Service as a financially independent
entity that would pay its personnel costs and other expenses from its own revenues.
However, certain costs of pension benefits under CSRS continued to be paid from
the general revenues of the U.S. Treasury. This occurred because the contributions
to the CSRS made by employees and their employing agencies (including the Post
Office Department and, later, USPS) were not adequate to fully fund the retirement
annuities paid by CSRS. The Civil Service Retirement Amendments of 1969 (P.L.
91-93) required both participating employees and their employing agencies each to
contribute an amount equal to 7.0% of basic pay to the CSRDF to finance retirement
benefits under CSRS. The Postal Service pays the employer contribution for USPS
employees from the revenue it receives from customers, while other federal agencies
pay the employer contribution from amounts appropriated annually by Congress.
The combined contributions from employees and employing agencies – equal
to 14% of employee pay – are not sufficient to finance the retirement benefits
provided under the Civil Service Retirement System. The costs of CSRS that are not
financed by the 7.0% employee and 7.0% agency contributions are attributable
mainly to increases in future CSRS benefits that result from (1) employees’ annual
pay raises, and (2) annual cost-of-living adjustments in the pensions paid to CSRS
annuitants. In actuarial terms, the employee and agency contributions totaling 14%
of pay are equal to the static normal cost of CSRS benefits.8 This is the benefit that
would be paid if employees received no future pay raises and annuitants received no
future cost-of-living adjustments. The dynamic normal cost of CSRS pensions
includes the cost of financing future benefit increases that result from pay raises and
cost-of-living adjustments.9 The dynamic normal cost of CSRS has been estimated
by OPM to be an amount equal to 24.4% of employee pay.
For non-postal federal employees covered by CSRS, the federal government
pays somewhat more than half of the 10.4 percentage point difference between the
14% of pay contributed by employees and their employing agencies and the 24.4%
normal cost of the program. This additional contribution by the federal government
is a direct transfer from the general revenues of the Treasury to CSRDF. It does not
pass through individual agency budgets. The remaining cost of CSRS constitutes an
unfunded liability of the system. This liability eventually will be borne by the
Treasury when CSRS annuities are paid to retirees and their surviving dependents.
7 5 U.S.C. 8348(d).
8 A pension plan’s normal cost is the level percentage of pay that, invested today at a
particular assumed real rate of interest, will be sufficient to fully finance the retirement
benefits under the plan.
9 Two other elements of a pension plan’s dynamic normal cost are increases in benefits that
result from (1) new or expanded benefits and (2) newly covered groups of workers. These
have not been significant elements of the dynamic normal cost of the CSRS benefits of
Postal Service employees.

CRS-4
From 1974 through 1993, Congress passed several laws that gradually
transferred to USPS all costs associated with CSRS benefits accrued by USPS
employees since July 1, 1971, including the costs resulting from employees’ pay
raises and retirees’ cost-of-living adjustments.10 The cumulative effect of these laws
has been that all CSRS benefits accrued by USPS employees since July 1971 have
been fully financed, either by retroactive payments by USPS or by payments that are
mandated by law to be made each year by the USPS.11 A memorandum prepared by
CRS in June 1997 stated that:
As a result [of these laws], there are no unfunded pension liabilities for CSRS
benefits earned by USPS employees since the USPS was established. All postal
employee retirement benefits accrued since June 30, 1971 have been financed
either through lump-sum payments from the USPS, or are fully paid for on an
ongoing basis by the combination of employee contributions and USPS
payments.12
Federal Employees Retirement System. As of March 2002, 66% of the
USPS active workforce were covered by FERS. The normal cost of the pension
component of FERS has been estimated by OPM to be 11.5% of pay. For both postal
workers and other federal employees, FERS is fully funded by the combination of
employee contributions (currently 0.8% of pay for most workers) and agency
contributions (currently 10.7% of pay). USPS pays the agency share of FERS from
postal revenues. Unlike CSRS, FERS has no unfunded pension liabilities. The full
dynamic normal cost of the FERS basic retirement annuity is required by law to be
fully financed by the sum of employee and agency contributions. Dynamic normal
cost includes the effects of employee pay raises and retiree cost-of-living-adjustments
(COLAs) and the full cost of all military service (minus employee contributions).
The OPM Analysis of USPS Contributions
for CSRS Benefits

In the course of its review of USPS finances carried out at the request of the
Senate Committee on Governmental Affairs, GAO realized that there was no
contemporary accounting of the Service’s obligations to the Civil Service Retirement
and Disability Fund. It therefore requested that OPM review the Service’s CSRS
financing as if a separate retirement account had been established for income and
benefit payments since USPS was established as an independent entity in 1971.
OPM undertook and completed the review, though it did not report back to GAO on
it. The director of OPM, Kay Coles James, wrote the postmaster general on
November 1, 2002, notifying him that OPM actuaries “project that future payments
10 These laws include P.L. 93-349, P.L. 100-203, P.L. 101-239, P.L. 101-508, and P.L. 103-
66.
11 It is important to note that financing a defined-benefit pension plan necessarily requires
a number of economic and demographic estimates and assumptions, any of which may prove
to be wrong.
12 CRS Congressional Distribution Memorandum, “United States Postal Service Employee
Benefit Costs,” Carolyn L. Merck, June 5, 1997.

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required under current legislation will overfund your estimated CSRS liability by
approximately $71 billion.”13
In a memorandum summarizing their study, OPM stated that “our analysis
shows that the net accumulated value of USPS payments already received is currently
approaching the value of its projected future CSRS benefits. [I]f the current funding
provisions remain in place, USPS will pay substantially more than will be needed to
fund future benefits.” The OPM summary further stated that “the major reason for
the projected over-funding is due to the excess interest earned by the fund; that is,
interest earnings in excess of the 5% that was assumed under the statutory funding
method.”
The OPM analysis also pointed out two elements of the Postal Service’s
financing of CSRS benefits that distinguish it from other federal agencies, and which
are important factors in the potential overfunding of CSRS benefits for employees
of the Postal Service. First, under law the Postal Service is responsible only for CSRS
benefits that were earned by USPS employees after June 30, 1971. Consequently, a
significant proportion of the Postal Service’s early contributions to the Civil Service
Retirement and Disability Fund remained in the Fund and were credited with interest
from year to year. Second, due to a series of laws passed between 1989 and 1993,
USPS is required to pay for the increases in CSRS pensions that result from annual
cost-of-living adjustments (COLAs). As a result, the Postal Service – unlike any
other federal agency – is required to pay into CSRDF an amount that approximates
the full cost of the Civil Service Retirement System. It is these two factors, in
combination with the interest earnings in excess of the assumed 5% rate of return,
that could lead to pension contributions and interest earnings exceeding the value of
CSRS benefits owed to USPS retirees and their survivors.
The interest rate used in CSRS financing. Federal law requires the
Postal Service to finance the increases in CSRS annuities that result from pay raises
and cost-of-living adjustments by amortizing the increased costs over periods of 30
years and 15 years, respectively.14 The payments must be made in “equal annual
installments with interest computed at the rate used in the most recent valuation of
the Civil Service Retirement System.”15 According to OPM, “the assumed interest
rate used in CSRS financing has been set at 5% since 1972.” However, while OPM
uses a 5% interest rate in its static valuation of CSRS, it currently uses a nominal
interest rate of 6.75% when valuing the liabilities of the CSRS on a dynamic basis.16
The dynamic valuation of CSRS liabilities is a more accurate measure of the present
value of future CSRS annuities. Since the enactment of the Omnibus Budget
Reconciliation Act (OBRA) of 1990 – which required the Postal Service to pay for
13 See [http://postcom.org/public/csrs/OPM%20letter%20on%20USPS-CSRS.pdf], visited
Feb. 25, 2003, for a copy of the OPM Director’s letter.
14 5 U.S.C. §§ 8348(h) and 8348(m).
15 5 U.S.C. §§ 8348(h)(2) and 8348(m)(2).
16 U.S. Office of Personnel Management, Civil Service Retirement and Disability Fund,
Report for Fiscal Year 2001
, p.12; and Funding of CSRS Benefits by the Postal Service,
Nov., 2002, p. 4.

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the increase in CSRS liabilities resulting from COLAs granted since 1971 and to
amortize the cost of future COLAs – USPS has been paying the full dynamic cost of
CSRS. It could be argued that after the enactment of the OBRA of 1990, OPM
should have based each new series of Postal Service amortization payments under 5
U.S.C. 8348(h) and 8348(m) on the rate of interest that it used in its most recent
dynamic valuation of CSRS. It is important to note, however, that the Postal
Service’s projected over payments to CSRS are due to the combined effects of
several factors, as described immediately above. Thus, even if after 1990 USPS
payments under 5 U.S.C. 8348(h) and 8348(m) had been based on the rate of interest
that OPM used in its most recent dynamic valuation, the overfunding of CSRS that
OPM currently projects would not have been eliminated; it would, however, have
been reduced.
Estimated amount of future overfunding. In its analysis of USPS
liabilities to CSRS, OPM estimated the present value of future CSRS benefits
payable to USPS annuitants to be $172.6 billion as of September 30, 2002.17 OPM
estimated the amount now in the CSRDF that is attributable to payments by USPS
and its employees (and to interest credited to those payments) at $152.1 billion.18
OPM estimated the present value of future payments into the CSRDF on behalf of
Postal Service CSRS participants (and interest on those payments) at $91.5 billion.
Therefore, the sum of CSRDF assets attributable to the USPS and the future income
to the CSRDF is $243.6 billion.19 This exceeds the estimated present value of future
benefits by $71.0 billion, which is the amount that OPM has identified as “potential
overfunding” of CSRS benefits payable to USPS annuitants and their surviving
dependents.20 OPM Director James’ November 1, 2002 letter to the postmaster
general made it clear that, “(w)hile significant overfunding is projected to occur in
the future under current law, none has occurred to date. In fact, we estimate $20.5
billion in future benefits remains to be funded.” Future normal contributions will
fund $15.5 billion of the shortfall, leaving $5 billion still to be funded. Still, this is
considerably less than the $32 billion shortfall that had hitherto been assumed to
exist.
Limitations of the estimates. Each of the estimates underlying the OPM
recalculation of USPS retirement obligations is, necessarily, based on assumptions
about the future. OPM noted in the summary of its analysis that “the amount of
projected over-funding is an estimate and will vary depending on future economic
and demographic experience.” Elsewhere, OPM has stated that “the normal cost and
actuarial liability of the retirement system depend primarily on the real interest rate
17 The present value of a future stream of income or expenditure is the amount that would
be needed today to generate that stream of income or payments, assuming a particular
investment rate of return.
18 This is the sum of contributions by the USPS and its employees plus interest on those
contributions, minus the amount paid to annuitants that is attributable to service after June
30, 1971, when USPS was formed.
19 152.1 + 91.5 = 243.6
20 243.6 - 172.6 = 71.0

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and on the difference between the interest rate and the salary increase assumption.”21
The estimated present value of future USPS benefits under CSRS ($172.6 billion) is
based on estimates that in the long-term, inflation will average 3.75% per year,
annual pay raises will average 4.25%, and the real rate of interest will be 3.0%. (The
real rate of interest is the difference between the nominal interest rate and the rate of
inflation. OPM’s estimates are based on a nominal interest rate of 6.75% and an
inflation rate of 3.75%). To the extent that actual experience differs from these
estimates, the liabilities of the retirement system could be higher or lower than OPM
has estimated.
The future liabilities of CSRS also will depend on the demographic experience
of the program, mainly the number of people who receive CSRS annuities and the
length of time over which those annuities are paid. Actuaries can estimate life
expectancy and average age of retirement, but the timing of retirement can change
as a result of government policy. For example, downsizing of agencies or
privatization of government functions could lead to people retiring from the federal
government earlier, and collecting benefits longer, than had been assumed. The
reduction in benefits under CSRS for early retirement is 2% per year, which is lower
than an “actuarially fair” reduction would be.22 Changes in government policy that
result in an increase in early retirement would therefore increase the liabilities of
CSRS. Such changes in policy are, of course, unpredictable. Nevertheless, they
provide an example of the uncertainty of the estimates of the future liabilities of the
CSRS.
GAO’s review of the estimates. Eight Members of Congress,
including the new chairs of the Senate Governmental Affairs and the House
Government Reform Committees, asked the General Accounting Office to review
the calculations leading OPM to the conclusion of overfunding. On January 31, 2003,
GAO released its review of the OPM analysis.23
GAO’s report revealed that OPM’s analysis had treated the obligations to pay
retirement benefits based on prior military service of postal employees, and for
certain survivor annuities, in a way that is inconsistent with current law. OPM had
included these costs as an obligation to be met from USPS contributions to the
CSRDF, even though under current law the Department of the Treasury is
responsible for funding those costs.24 OPM’s estimate of USPS’s financial
21 Civil Service Retirement and Disability Fund, Report for Fiscal Year 2001, p. 7.
22 Under FERS the reduction in benefits for workers who retire between ages 55 and 62,
with at least 10 but fewer than 30 years of service, is 5% per year. (The reduction is 5%
multiplied by the number of years between the worker’s age at the time of retirement and
62.) Under Social Security, the reduction for claiming retired worker benefits before the
normal retirement age ranges from 5.0% to 6.7% per year, depending on the individual’s age
at retirement and the normal retirement age.
23 U.S. General Accounting Office, Review of the Office of Personnel Management’s
Analysis of the United States Postal Service’s Funding of Civil Service Retirement System
Costs,
GAO-03-448R, available at [http://www.gao.gov/new.items/d03448r.pdf].
24 Ibid., pp. 2, 20. The military service contribution was much larger than the survivor
(continued...)

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obligations to the Civil Service Retirement System included among those obligations
the cost of military service performed by CSRS-covered employees hired after July
1, 1971 and a pro-rated share of the military service performed by USPS employees
hired before July 1, 1971. GAO pointed out that under current law the cost of CSRS
benefits attributable to military service is borne by the U.S. Treasury (less required
employee contributions).
OPM responded to GAO’s comments by noting that their legislative proposal
would have the Postal Service fund the CSRS on a dynamic normal cost basis, in
which the agency contribution includes the cost of military service performed by
employees who have made the required deposit to the CSRDF. OPM also said this
was consistent with the way FERS treated the military obligation. However, OPM’s
accounting differs somewhat from the Administration’s FY2004 budget proposal for
federal agencies to fully fund CSRS. The proposed budget would have agencies
begin paying the full dynamic cost of CSRS benefits, but it would not make all past
military service an obligation of each agency, as OPM did in calculating the Postal
Service’s CSRS liabilities.
Offsetting this factor to some extent was the credit to the USPS account of a
special $285 million payment made with appropriated funds in FY1975, which with
compounded interest increased the postal balance by $2.9 billion today. In adjusting
the OPM figures by these two factors (and several less significant items), GAO
concluded that the projected overfunding was $103.1 billion, instead of the $71.0
billion projected by OPM. GAO also said that instead of still being underfunded
currently by $20.5 billion, USPS has currently overfunded its obligation by $4.5
billion.
USPS Wants to Reduce Its CSRS Payments to OPM
The postmaster general announced what he called “good financial news” from
OPM to the USPS board of governors and to the public on November 5, 2002.25
Reaping the benefit from the original OPM recalculation, he said, would allow USPS
to reduce its debt to the Treasury by $3 billion in FY2003. Of even more
significance to the mailing community, however, he also said that changing the
funding formula would allow USPS to defer the next rate increase from early 2004,
when it is now expected, to 2006. The news was greeted with great fanfare by
mailing organizations.26
Proposed legislation. The postmaster general emphasized, however, that
none of this could take place without a change in the law. In fact, OPM had already
drafted legislation that would, if enacted, allow USPS to fund future CSRS benefits
24 (...continued)
annuity component of the recalculation.
25 USPS press release, [http://www.usps.com/news/2002/press/pr02_pmg1105.htm], Nov.
5, 2002, p. 2, visited Jan. 2 , 2003.
26 For one example, see Cary H. Baer, “Are We Entering an Era of ‘Pax Postal’?,” DM
News
, Nov. 26, 2002.

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on a dynamic, normal cost basis. According to the postmaster general, “the
Administration will support the change and OMB, OPM, and the Department of the
Treasury have offered their support to brief lawmakers on Capitol Hill.”27 The draft
bill, entitled the “Postal Civil Service Retirement System Funding Reform Act,” was
circulated to the House Government Reform and Senate Governmental Affairs
Committees, where it formed the basis of H.R. 735 and S. 380, introduced by senior
members of both committees. The President’s FY2004 budget proposes its
enactment.
A statutory change would be needed for USPS to be able to reduce its
contributions to CSRDF because current law specifies that USPS payments are to be
based on the static normal cost of benefits. The proposed law would change the
funding formula to a dynamic normal cost assumption. It would raise the USPS
contribution from 7% to 17.4% for current employees, and thus fully fund current
obligations for CSRS employees just as FERS employees are now fully funded. This
would cost $1.1 billion more than USPS is now paying. Where money would be
saved – $4 billion – would be in the reduction of the deferred retirement liability
from $32 billion to $5 billion, and lengthening the amortization schedule for the
remaining $5 billion from 30 to 40 years. (On the other hand, if GAO’s figures had
been adopted in the legislation, there would be no underpayment to amortize.) USPS
has said that the overall effect would be a reduction of $2.9 billion in payments to
CSRDF in FY2003, and $2.6 billion in subsequent years when the amortization
schedule becomes effective. To give a perspective on these amounts, USPS expenses
in FY2002 were $67.2 billion, and the amount realized annually from the 7.7%
negotiated postage rate increase on June 30, 2002 is about $5.2 billion.28
Initial support for the legislation. Soon after the original OPM
announcement, mailers organizations asked the White House and their members to
press their contacts on Capitol Hill to support the legislation OPM has drafted. In
announcing the recalculation of USPS’s retirement fund obligations, the postmaster
general not only emphasized that the Administration supported the proposal, he also
put the benefits in terms that mailers could readily understand. He said that if
legislation were passed to reduce the Service’s contributions to CSRDF, it would
delay the next rate increase by 2 full years, to 2006. It would also allow USPS to pay
down its debt to the Treasury, now about $11.9 billion, by $3 billion in the current
fiscal year. This also would benefit mailers because it would reduce annual interest
payments to the Treasury, which in turn would lower the revenue requirement that
is ultimately paid by mailers through the rate process. In their communications on
the issue, mailers say that ensuring postage rate stability until 2006 will allow them
to invest billions of dollars in their businesses, stimulating the economy locally and
nationally. “Businesses would use those funds to hire employees, boost advertising
dollars and stimulate consumer spending. However, if Congress fails to pass the
27 USPS press release no. 83, [http://www.usps.com/news/2002/press/pr02_083.htm] Nov.
5, 2002, p.2, visited Jan. 2, 2003.
28 See CRS Report RS21192, The 2002 Postage Rate Increase, by Nye Stevens.

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legislation, businesses will instead spend those billions of dollars on increased
postage rates.”29
Supporters of the legislation have emphasized that there is certain sense of
urgency about it. Because the normal rate-setting process takes a minimum of 10
months after a case is filed with the Postal Rate Commission, preparations for the
filing, which have already begun, need to move into high gear almost immediately
if increased rates are to take effect early in 2004. Preparations for a rate case are a
major investment not only for USPS, but also for interveners like mailers, unions,
and competitors.
H.R. 735 and S. 380. On March 5, 2003 the Senate Committee on
Governmental Affairs ordered reported S. 380, as amended. On March 6, the House
Committee on Government Reform ordered reported an amended version of H.R.
735. Both bills would require the Postal Service to contribute annually to the CSRDF
on behalf of employees covered by CSRS an amount equal to the dynamic normal
cost of CSRS minus the amount contributed by employees. The dynamic normal cost
of CSRS is currently estimated to be equal to 24.4% of payroll. Employees covered
by CSRS are required to have 7.0% of pay withheld and deposited in the CSRDF.
Thus, the required Postal Service contribution would be equal to 17.4% of payroll.
Because the dynamic normal cost of CSRS includes the effects of future employee
pay raises and retiree COLAs, the separate payments that the Postal Service is
required to make under current law to fund the future increases in CSRS annuities
that result from pay raises and COLAs would no longer be necessary. Consequently,
H.R. 735 and S. 380 would repeal the provisions of law that require the Postal
Service to amortize over 30 years and 15 years, respectively, the increases in future
CSRS annuities that result from annual employee pay raises and retiree COLAs.
Both bills would require the Office of Personnel Management to estimate any
“supplemental liability” of the Postal Service with respect to CSRS benefits earned
by current or former USPS employees and to amortize (pay off, with interest) this
supplemental liability over 40 years. The bills define the supplemental liability as the
amount by which the present value of CSRS benefits earned by current or former
employees of the Postal Service exceeds the present value of past and future
contributions of the Postal Service and its employees, plus interest credited to those
contributions. Under current law, CSRS benefits that are attributable to military
service are paid from the general revenues of the U.S. Treasury (minus any employee
deposits to the CSRDF). H.R. 735 and S. 380 would include the value of CSRS
benefits attributable to military service as a financial obligation of the Postal Service
in the calculation of the Postal Service’s supplemental liability.
H.R. 735 and S. 380 would require the Office of Personnel Management to
compute the amount of any savings resulting from enactment of the legislation. Both
H.R. 735 and S. 380 would express “the sense of the Congress” that (1) if enacted,
the savings accruing to the Postal Service would be sufficient to allow it to hold
postage rates unchanged until at least 2006; (2) some portion of the savings should
be used to address the Postal Service’s unfunded obligations related to
29 [http://www.postcom.org/public/csrs/postcom_csrs_q&a.htm], visited Jan. 2, 2003.

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post-retirement health benefits for its current and former employees; and (3) none of
the savings should be used to pay bonuses to Postal Service executives.
H.R. 735 would require any savings realized in fiscal years 2003 and 2004 to
be used to reduce the debt owed by the Postal Service to the Federal Financing Bank
of the Treasury “in consultation with the Secretary of the Treasury.” The Postal
Service would be prohibited from incurring new debt that would offset these savings.
Savings realized in FY2005 would be used to hold Postal rates unchanged and to
reduce the postal debt, “to such extent and in such manner as the Postal Service shall
specify (in consultation with the Secretary of the Treasury).” Savings realized after
FY2005 would be held in escrow until otherwise provided for by law. S. 380 would
require savings realized by the Postal Service through the end of FY2007 be used to
reduce the postal debt “to such extent and in such manner as the Secretary of the
Treasury, in consultation with the United States Postal Service, shall specify....” The
distinction is important for two reasons. USPS prefers the House version because it
puts USPS, rather than the Treasury, in control of deciding how to direct the savings
to debt reduction. Second, the escrow provision has the effect of reducing the budget
costs of the measure, since it would require that savings would actually have to be
accrued through postal rate increases. Mailers dislike the provision for the same
reason.
Under S. 380 the Postal Service would submit to the House, Senate and the
GAO by December 31, 2004 a report recommending the disposition of future
savings. Similar reports would be required not later than 8 months before the Postal
Service requests a rate adjustment. The report would consider whether and to what
extent future savings should be used to address debt repayment, prefunding of post-
retirement healthcare benefits, capital investment, maintaining postal rate stability,
and any other matter. Under H.R. 735 the Postal Service would be required to
submit to the President and Congress by September 30, 2003, a proposal detailing
how any savings accruing after FY2005 should be expended. The report would
consider whether and to what extent future savings should be used to address debt
repayment, prefunding of post-retirement healthcare benefits, capital investment,
delaying or moderating increases in postal rates, and any other matter. Within 180
days of receiving both the Postal Service proposal and the GAO’s evaluation of the
report, Congress would reconsider the question of how savings accruing to the Postal
Service should be used.
S. 380 would require the Postal Service by December 31, 2003 to submit to the
President and Congress a report describing how it proposes to address its unfunded
obligations for post-retirement healthcare benefits for current and former employees.
The report must describe how prior and future accrued costs for post-retirement
healthcare benefits, and amounts needed to prefund those costs, are treated in
financial statements and in establishing postage rates and fees for postal services. In
preparing the report, the Postal Service would be required to consider the report of
the President’s Commission on the U.S. Postal Service. Within 60 days of the Postal
Service submitting its report, the General Accounting Office (GAO) would be
required to submit an evaluation of the report to the House and Senate.
Obstacles to the legislation. There has been no publicly voiced opposition
to the legislation so far, and both bills were reported favorably by committee without

CRS-12
dissent. Several obstacles could arise, however. One is the budgetary impact of the
bill. In reviewing OPM’s draft of the legislation, the Congressional Budget Office
(CBO) said that while the legislation would improve the financial position of USPS,
it could increase deficits (or reduce surpluses) in the unified federal budget
depending in part on what USPS did with the savings.30 If USPS were to use the
savings to hold down postage rates, as it says it will, this would reduce overall
government receipts. CBO said that the impact could be a deficit increase of as much
as $10 billion to $15 billion over the FY2003-2007 period, and as much as $36
billion to $41 billion over the 10-year period from FY2003 to FY2013. Under past
budget enforcement procedures, this reduction in the USPS contribution to the CSRS
Fund might have required the enactment of offsetting savings elsewhere in the
budget. Partly in response to the CBO’s report, the two bills that have been
introduced direct USPS to use the savings realized in the first 3 years (H.R. 735) or
5 years (S. 380) following enactment to reduce the Postal Service’s debt to the
Federal Financing Bank. The House and Senate FY2004 budget resolutions, as
reported by the House and Senate Budget Committees, both assume passage of
versions of the legislation. CBO has rescored the bills in light of the revised
provisions.31
It could be argued that now is not a propitious time for Congress to act. The
President has just appointed a blue ribbon commission to review the Postal Service,
and it is expected to report on July 31, 2003.32 Deferring a decision on the funding
question until the commission has made its recommendations could allow the matter
to be addressed in a larger context, taking into account the overall financial situation
and prospects of USPS in the decades to come. On the other hand, it could also be
argued that providing USPS some relief from short-term cash flow problems could
allow some breathing room for thoughtful consideration of reform measures, and that
a smaller USPS debt to the Treasury is unlikely to be regarded as constraining by the
commission.
Both GAO and CBO in their reports made another argument in the direction of
caution toward legislative action. They both pointed to another very large obligation
that USPS has for funding health care benefits for its retirees, which is treated in
USPS financial statements on a pay-as-you-go basis. The Postal Service 2002
Annual Report
estimates the amount at $40 billion to $50 billion.33 GAO and CBO
both suggest that treating pensions completely independently of mounting health care
costs for retirees would be somewhat myopic. H.R. 735 and S. 380 both would
require USPS to consider the impact of funding post-retirement health care benefits
in reports to Congress on how the savings would be used.
30 Letter to Honorable Jim Nussle, Chairman, House Budget Committee, Jan. 27, 2003,
available at [http://www.cbo.gov/showdoc.cfm?index=4033&sequence=0].
3 1 C B O ’ s c o s t e s t i m a t e s a r e a v a i l a b l e o n i t s W e b s i t e :
[http://www.cbo.gov/showdoc.cfm?index=4120&sequence=0] for (S. 380) and
[http://www.cbo.gov/showdoc.cfm?index=4106&sequence=0] for (H.R. 735).
32 U.S. President George W. Bush, “President’s Commission on the United States Postal
Service,” Executive Order 13278, Federal Register, vol. 67, Dec. 13, 2002, p. 76671.
33 At page 26.