Re: The Medieval Postal Service
Seiji S.C. Steimetz
Wed, 10 Jan 2001 01:07:55 -0800
|
Any idea what the market price was (in real terms)
for sending a package from Madrid to Constantinople?
Seiji
__________________________________________________ Seiji
Steimetz
Office: SST 311 Dept. of
Economics
(949) 824-1390 University of California, Irvine 3151 Social Science
Plaza
[EMAIL PROTECTED] Irvine, CA
92697
www.ags.uci.edu/~ssteimet
"We dance round in a ring and suppose, But the
Secret sits in the middle and knows." - Robert
Frost __________________________________________________
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Tuesday, January 09, 2001 3:10
PM
Subject: The Medieval Postal
Service
Last summer, I argued with a friend over the privatization
of the postal service. He said that the postal service already did a good
job as one could ask for. A bystander opined that without market forces,
how could one really know if a job was done efficiently or not?
With
the postal service, I now have an a partial answer. I was reading a
Menand's history of the Mediterranean in the 1400's. He caclulated that it
took about two weeks, during good weather and peaceful times, for a package
to move from Madrid to Constantinople. Not bad. The current postal service
offers first class packages in about 7-10 working days. CDnow routinely
tells customers 14 days is to be expected.
Interesting.
-fabio
|