Tuesday 23 April 2024

No More Return to Sender?

Paying the bills

Latest

Coffee or Chocolate? Why not both?

QCOSTARICA -San José is a city of surprises. Two...

Plastic bags are not going away (yet)

QCOSTARICA -- Different commercial and productive sectors in Costa...

Media outlets in Nicaragua not reporting news regarding Sheynnis Palacios

QCOSTARICA -- According to the Costa Rica based Fundación...

Can Microdose Mushrooms Boost Productivity? Find Out What Experts Are Saying

Microdosing involves taking a small, controlled amount—usually around 1/8...

“Respect for the division of powers” legislator tells President Chaves

QCOSTARICA - A call for respect for the division...

Carlos Alvarado: Populism is thriving in Costa Rica

QCOSTARICA -- On Wednesday, former president Carlos Alvarado (2018-2022),...

1960s Costa Rica

QCOSTARICA - The first indigenous peoples of Costa Rica...

Dollar Exchange

¢498.77 BUY

¢502.86 SELL

23 April 2024 - At The Banks - Source: BCCR

Paying the bills

Share

In Costa Rica, a quarter of all mail never reaches its destination

costarica-correos-sm

In many parts of Latin America, these are not just the directions you might be given by a friendly local, but an actual postal address. For example, “from the Fogoncito restaurant (or Plaza Mayor if you don’t know where the Fogoncito), one block west, to the right”, is the address for the new offices of Convergys, in Pavas.

Costa Rica, Panama, and Nicaragua are among the countries that use landmarks, such as schools, parks, or even fast food restaurants, to locate houses and businesses in bizarre address systems that make mailmen “more like detectives,” said one regional newspaper last month.

A reader asks, why don’t Ticos give you the full address? For example, another typical direction for the Convergys office would be, “from the national stadium, go past the Oscar Arias house, call me when you get to Plaza Mayor”. At the Q we don’t have the answer, if you do, use the comment section below.

- Advertisement -

Inefficient post can seriously impact a country’s economy, according to the Universal Postal Union (UPU), so countries across the hemisphere are making efforts to modernize.

Ecuador and Colombia last month became the latest Latin American countries to introduce a postal code system. Their aim was to reduce the millions of mail items lost every year and give their nations “an identity at the global level,” says Ecuador’s National Postal Agency’s (ANP) director Maria de los Angeles Morales, who has overseen the $1.2 million project.

costa-rica-signsAround 1.7 million mail items were lost in Ecuador last year, despite the use of street names and house numbers, and Ms. Morales estimates $75 million worth of gasoline was wasted on failed deliveries.

In Costa Rica meanwhile, a quarter of all mail never reaches its destination. A 2008 study estimated that the lack of systematic addresses and signage costs the country US$720 million annually.

An envelope once arrived to the capital city of San Jose’s central post office headquarters addressed: “To the man who is sometimes outside the post office.” That letter did apparently reach its intended recipient.

“People know all about the magical realism of Gabriel García Márquez but they don’t realize that in many ways Latin Americans are actually living it,” says Pablo Villalva, communications head at Ecuador’s ANP. “We want to change that, make our public services modern and efficient, in line with the rest of the world.”

- Advertisement -

ANP’s staff are very proud of their postal system overhaul, seeing it as an illustration of Ecuador’s transformative progress under President Rafael Correa’s “Citizen’s Revolution,” both domestically and on the global stage.

“We want to get rid of this image of a ‘banana republic,'” says Mr. Villalva. “Germany has had post codes since 1941 – why are we so far behind? This is going to be very important for the strategic sector of the Ecuadorean economy.”

Comprehensive street naming and house numbering is essential for a country’s socioeconomic infrastructure, according to the UPU. Not only do they improve public services, but they facilitate business and trade, thus impacting national development. Studies have found a positive correlation between a lack of street addresses and income inequalities, and a negative correlation between a lack of street addresses and the income per capita in a country.

Ecuador has been divided into 1,140 postal zones, each containing around 6,000 homes and 30,000 inhabitants. The many private mail companies operating in the country have been involved in the process, and a major publicity campaign has been launched.

- Advertisement -

Efforts to name streets and introduce postal codes in Costa Rica have so far failed to really catch on, and getting Ecuadoreans to use the new system is now ANP’s greatest challenge, says Morales.

Making post efficient in a country with no such tradition will require a “change in culture,” she said – right down to teaching people “that mailboxes are for putting post in, not trash.”

Source: Csmonitor.com

- Advertisement -
Paying the bills
Rico
Ricohttp://www.theqmedia.com
"Rico" is the crazy mind behind the Q media websites, a series of online magazines where everything is Q! In these times of new normal, stay at home. Stay safe. Stay healthy.

Related Articles

Cuba Plane Crash: Company ‘Had Safety Complaints’

Solidarity and investigations after the accident. Cuban authorities are investigating the...

The Volcanos Of Central America (By Country)

Among the things most loved by travelers to Central America is...

Subscribe to our stories

To be updated with all the latest news, offers and special announcements.

Discover more from Q COSTA RICA

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading