The Deutsche Bundespost was a German state-run postal service and telecommunications business founded in 1947. It was initially the second largest federal employer during its time. After staff reductions in the 1980s, the staff was reduced to roughly 543,200 employees in 1985. The corporation was dissolved in 1995 under the first and second postal reforms that took place in the German Post Office. Following the reforms, the former Deutsche Bundespost was broken into three publicly traded corporations: Deutsche Post AG, Deutsche Telekom, and Deutsche Postbank AG.
History
It was created in 1947 in the Trizone as a successor to the Reichspost. Between 1947 and 1950 the enterprise was called Deutsche Post. Until 1989 the Deutsche Bundespost was a state-owned operation.
The legal basis for the administrative activity of the Bundespost was the postal administration act. A central goal of public administrative policy after 1924 was financial self-sufficiency. Political goals, however, often superseded this goal. According to the PostVwG, the federal postal system was to be administered "according to the principles of the policy of the FRG, in particular trade, economic, financial and social policies" and "the interests of the German national economy." The Deutsche Bundespost was the largest employer in the Federal Republic. In 1985 it employed 543,200 people.
Reforms
In the first post office reform, the Bundespost was divided into three divisions :
Deutsche Bundespost Postdienst – postal service
Deutsche Bundespost Telekom – communications service
Deutsche Bundespost Postbank – postal bank
The central authorities remained as described above. The divisions were privatized in the second post office reform, resulting in:
The federal ministry for post office and telecommunications retained oversight responsibility for postal services and telecommunications. After the dissolution of that ministry on 1 January 1998, those tasks were taken over by a new federal network regulatory agency under the federal ministry for economics and technology. Other functions were taken over by the federal ministry of finance. Some telecommunications functions were turned over to the federal ministry of the interior. For certain official and legal purposes, a "federal institution for post and telecommunication" was created.