Postal traffic to the United States plunged more than 80 per cent following Washington’s imposition of new tariffs, with 88 operators worldwide fully or partially suspending services, the Universal Postal Union (UPU) said on Saturday.
The UPU, the United Nations’ postal cooperation agency, was working on “the rapid development of a new technical solution that would help get mail moving to the United States again”, its director general Masahiko Metoki said in a statement.
US President Donald Trump’s administration announced in late July that it was abolishing a tax exemption on small packages entering the US from August 29.
The move sparked a flurry of announcements from postal services, including in Australia, Britain, France, Germany, India, Italy and Japan, that most US-bound packages would no longer be accepted.
A customer collects a parcel at an Australia Post store in Melbourne on August 26. Australia has joined a string of countries suspending some postal deliveries to the United States. Photo: AFP
The UPU said data exchanged between postal operators via its systems showed that traffic to the US was down 81 per cent on August 29, compared to a week earlier.
AloJapan.com