Abstract

Access to ‘universal banking services’ through the post office network has been a goal of the UK governments over the last twenty years. Various policies and mechanisms have been put in place in an attempt to maintain national geographical coverage with access points while increasing the financial viability of the network. One such mechanism is represented by the six official criteria for access to post offices, expressed as a percentage of the UK population living within one mile, three miles, and six miles of a post office. The method for calculating compliance with these access criteria is not published. Nor will any granular results be published, but only an annual statement that the criteria are being met. This article examines geographical and temporal access to post offices in order to understand the territorial coverage of the network and the impact this has on the provision of basic banking services. The area under investigation is Wales, for which we are reviewing the Government’s official access criteria. Through the Post Office Ltd website, we are collecting up-to-date information on the locations and opening hours of post offices in Wales. In addition, a detailed population grid is combined with calculated areas of equidistant geographical access, called isochrones, to determine the number of people who have access to the post office network. The isochrones are based on the Welsh road network and are calculated for different travel modes and thresholds using a powerful routing engine. Our results show that the official access criteria are largely unmet in Wales. In addition, and in contrast to previous studies, we show a rural-urban divide not in terms of spatial access, but in the combination of spatial and temporal access. The results are of both practical and theoretical value and will hopefully inform policy makers.

Highlights

  • The Post Office Ltd is a legal entity owned by the UK Government

  • This paper studies access to basic banking services provided through the post office network in Wales

  • We reviewed government policies from between 2009 and 2019 that influenced the post office network function as a provider of basic banking services

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The Post Office Ltd is a legal entity owned by the UK Government This organisation maintains around 11,500 access points and for years it has been used by the UK Government for the exclusive distribution of welfare payments. For these reasons, Post Office Ltd was considered the appropriate vehicle by many UK governments for achieving the financial inclusion of those with no or insufficient access to banking services. A first government policy paper published in the year 2000 recommended that Post Office should develop a concept for a ‘Universal Bank’ (Performance and Innovation Unit, 2000) This idea, morphed by 2003 into the quite different concept of ‘universal banking services’ (Midgley, 2005). Numerous transformation initiatives and policy reviews have tried to find a viable financial model for the Post Office to deliver basic banking services (Performance and Innovation Unit, 2000; Trade and Industry Committee, 2007; Business and Enterprise Committee, 2008; Public Accounts Committee, 2009)

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call