Correos de México


Correos de México is the national postal service of Mexico.

History

On February 17, 1907, President Porfirio Díaz founded the "Palacio Postal" also known as the "Quinta Casa de Correos".
But Mexico has had a postal service since 1580. The office's main job was to communicate the vice royalty of New Spain with the metropolis, Spain.
In 1921, Sepomex was in need of an international regulatory and unified postal service, and the Mexican government participated in the formation of the "Unión Panamericana de Correos" in Buenos Aires. In 1931, Spain joined the union, which changed the name to "Unión Postal de las Américas y España" In 1990, Portugal was added to the union, which again changed the name to "Unión Postal de las Américas, España y Portugal".
In 1933, by presidential order, the Postal service took control of the telegraph service in Mexico, creating the office "Dirección General de Correos y Telegrafos".
In 1942, the President ordered the separation of the postal service and telegraph into two entities.

Reorganization

In 1986, the government gave autonomy to the Postal Service. This was in response to the need to improve the service, which was considered one of the worst in the world and was now facing competition from private companies.
In order to compete with the private postal services like DHL, UPS, FedEx, Multipack, Estafeta and others the postal service created a new entity, "Mexpost," but more expensive than normal postal service but also more efficient working as a private company but still being part of the Mexican Postal Service.

Recent history

In 2008, President Felipe Calderón ordered the overhaul of Servicio Postal Mexicano and rebranded it as Correos de México. Along with a new name and new image, the agency was restructured helping to streamline operations, improve performance, and expand postal outlets to non-traditional locations like private businesses.