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Forever Stamp Identification

 
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Posted 10/22/2010   10:14 pm  Show Profile Bookmark this topic Add stjensen92 to your friends list Get a Link to this Message
Does anyone know a link to the identification of the different forever stamp varieties and their corresponding Scott numbers?
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Posted 10/22/2010   11:09 pm  Show Profile Bookmark this reply Add tomiseksj to your friends list  Get a Link to this Reply
Try the Mystic Stamp Catalog at http://www.mysticstampcatalog.com/
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Bedrock Of The Community
United States
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Posted 10/23/2010   12:30 pm  Show Profile Bookmark this reply Add wt1 to your friends list  Get a Link to this Reply
While this doesn't directly respond to your question, I found this 2007 article recently (when the Forever Stamps were first introduced) that responds to a question as to how those Forever Stamps would keep pace with inflation should someone desire to make them an investment. I found it quite interesting:

Should I Invest in "Forever" Stamps?
Absolutely not.
By Nathaniel Rich
Posted Thursday, May 17, 2007, at 4:10 PM ET

The postal rate climbed 2 cents on Monday, about a month after the United States Postal Service introduced its new "forever" stamp. As of last week, the USPS had sold more than $82 million worth of the forever stamps, which lock in the 41-cent rate for eternity. One man in Pennsylvania walked into a post office and made an $8,000 investment on his own. Should we all be stocking up?

Absolutely not. Since 1971, postal rates have increased more slowly than the actual inflation rate, as measured by the U.S. Consumer Price Index. So, despite the numerous rate hikes over the last 36 years, stamps have actually been getting cheaper. The 20-cent stamp from 1981, for instance, would be equivalent to 45 cents in today's dollars—which makes today's rate 10 percent cheaper than it was 26 years ago. Should this historical pattern hold, you'd be paying more for today's forever stamps than you would for any stamp in the future, no matter how high the rate goes.

In fact, this pattern must hold—as a matter of law. In December, President Bush signed the Postal Accountability and Enhancement Act, which ensures that future price increases will be kept below an inflation-based ceiling. In other words, postage hikes will never surpass inflation—and the forever stamp will never become a good investment. Incidentally, the USPS announced the introduction of the forever stamp less than two months after Bush signed the act into law.

The USPS is not the first postal agency to catch on to the benefits of a forever stamp, which in philatelic circles is known by a less sexy moniker, "non-value indicator." Canada introduced them last November, joining Finland, Israel, the United Kingdom, Belgium, France, Norway, Monaco, and Sweden, among others.

American forever stamps would have been a good investment if they'd been introduced much earlier. The 2-cent stamp from 1919 would have been a real bargain, at a cost of 24 cents in today's dollars; so would 1952's 3-cent stamp (23 cents today). A forever stamp would have been attractive to the consumer as late as 1971—the year the USPS was formed—when first-class postage was just 6 cents, equal to 31 cents today. The biggest rip-off in the modern era? The 13-cent stamp from 1975—which would be 50 cents today.
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Edited by wt1 - 10/23/2010 12:36 pm
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Posted 10/23/2010   1:40 pm  Show Profile Bookmark this reply Add danstamps54 to your friends list  Get a Link to this Reply
Here's an old thread on the topic. I found the pictures very helpful!

https://goscf.com/t/331

Dan
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Experienced stamps need a home too. I'd rather have an example that is imperfect than no example.
I collect for enjoyment, not investment.
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Posted 10/23/2010   4:29 pm  Show Profile Bookmark this reply Add Londonbus1 to your friends list  Get a Link to this Reply

Quote:
The USPS is not the first postal agency to catch on to the benefits of a forever stamp, which in philatelic circles is known by a less sexy moniker, "non-value indicator." Canada introduced them last November, joining Finland, Israel, the United Kingdom, Belgium, France, Norway, Monaco, and Sweden, among others.



The equivalent of forever stamps have been used in the UK since 1989 and in Israel since 1990.
Both started out as Booklet stamps before moving on to bigger things.

Danstamps....welcome back ! Have your ears been burning ??
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Edited by Londonbus1 - 10/23/2010 4:31 pm
Bedrock Of The Community
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Posted 10/23/2010   8:12 pm  Show Profile Bookmark this reply Add wt1 to your friends list  Get a Link to this Reply
Another SCF related topic on Forever Stamps:

https://goscf.com/t/10078
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Posted 10/23/2010   10:09 pm  Show Profile Bookmark this reply Add danstamps54 to your friends list  Get a Link to this Reply

Quote:
Danstamps....welcome back ! Have your ears been burning ??


Whew! It was SCF? I thought I was getting tinnitus!

Dan
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Experienced stamps need a home too. I'd rather have an example that is imperfect than no example.
I collect for enjoyment, not investment.
APS Member #223433
Postmark Collectors Club Member #6333
Meter Stamp Society Member #1409
Valued Member
United States
5 Posts
Posted 10/24/2010   5:38 pm  Show Profile Bookmark this reply Add stjensen92 to your friends list  Get a Link to this Reply
Thanks for the help. I will try to sort through those links soon.

Christ is Lord,
Steve
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Israel
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Posted 10/25/2010   02:39 am  Show Profile Bookmark this reply Add Londonbus1 to your friends list  Get a Link to this Reply

Quote:
The equivalent of forever stamps have been used in the UK since 1989 and in Israel since 1990.


In the case of Great Britain....I might be mistaken.

It depends on what policies are taken when there is a change of monarch.
If it turns out that all QEII stamps will be withdrawn, then there can never be a 'permanent' stamp in the UK.
So far, I have only heard of the contrary, but one never knows.
It is also something that is not discussed so publicly !

Londonbus1
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