Title 39 › Part PART III— - MODERNIZATION AND FISCAL ADMINISTRATION › Chapter CHAPTER 20— - FINANCE › § 2002
When the Postal Service starts operating, it must count as its initial capital the Federal Government’s investment in the old Post Office Department. The Postal Service will decide the value of the assets and debts it gets, but the Comptroller General must approve those numbers. Assets are valued based on what they originally cost minus wear and tear, and the old Post Office’s books are treated as strong evidence of value. Unspent appropriated funds that belonged to the old department, and the obligations tied to them, move to the Postal Service. At any time, the Postal Service’s capital equals its assets (including the Fund and the Competitive Products Fund balances) minus its liabilities. The Postal Service, together with the Administrator of General Services and with approval from the Director of the Office of Management and Budget, will decide which Federal properties transfer at startup. Transfers happen at or near the start of operations and the asset values will be adjusted. Transfers include items like the Washington mail equipment shops, machinery and equipment, certain real estate (including property bought for postal buildings and property that was at least 55 percent used by the old department), contracts and records, and other former Post Office assets. After startup, the President may move property between the Postal Service and other agencies, with or without payment, if it serves the public interest.
Full Legal Text
Postal Service — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
39 U.S.C. § 2002
Title 39 — Postal Service
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73