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How much do post offices buy their stamps for?

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Headtime | 18:10 Tue 24th Jun 2003 | People & Places
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Do shops and post offices by stamps at less than their face value, in order to make a profit? If so does anyone know how much they pay for them?
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They don't buy them to make a profit, but as a service, so the face value is paid by shops, and they are issued to post offices who return the cash for the sales they make.
It is the same principle as pre-pay phone cards or tickets for a footie match.
The cost of producing the stamps is miniscule. The 'profit' is used to run the PO and the postie's wages.
Those shops, such as newsagents and tobacconists, which sell stamps, buy them at a discount of 5% (on the face value) which is then retained as commission. Because Post Offices sell many more stamps than other types of shops, possibly their commission is less than 5%.
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ta, each!

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