Saturday 3 March 2018

1186. ๐Ÿ‡ธ๐Ÿ‡ฑ The Commonwealth's Greediest Stamp Issuing Territories In 2017.


  ๐Ÿ‡ธ๐Ÿ‡ฑ It may be that we do not yet know about every stamp issue released by Commonwealth postal administrations or their agents during 2017 but we are getting a good idea. So here below is a list of the 15 most prolific Commonwealth countries in terms of number of stamps (including Post and Gos and My Stamps/Smilers) + miniature sheets/sheetlets + booklets issued during 2017.
  There are bound to be some stamps about whose existence we are not yet aware and I expect that New Zealand Post will add a considerable number of stamps to its final total when it releases its pack of Personalised stamps on to the philatelic market. But for the present at least the following table seems to be right according to my calculations. 
  The names of countries rather than those of postal services are used in the table even though it is likely that many of the philatelic items included in these numbers are probably not known about by the postal services whose country's names are printed on the products because of their contracting out of their philatelic services to agencies which can range from the highly respectable to the dubious. The list of shame is thus:-

  1 Sierra Leone - 1239 items (Stamperija)
  2 Solomon Islands - 636 items (Stamperija)
  3 United Kingdom - 364 items (Royal Mail)
  4 India - 288 items (India Post)
  5 Guernsey - 264 items (Guernsey Post, includes issues inscribed 'Alderney')
  6 Australia - 242 items (Australia Post, includes items inscribed 'Australian Antarctic Territory', 'Christmas Island', 'Cocos (Keeling) Islands' and 'Norfolk Island').
  7 Grenada - 229 items (IGPC includes items inscribed 'Grenada Carriacou and Petite Martinique).
  8 Antigua And Barbuda - 139 items (IGPC)
  9 Jersey - 125 items (Jersey Post)
  10 Bangladesh - 121 items (Bangladesh Post)
  11 Isle Of Man - 120 items (Isle Of Man Stamps and Coins)
  12 Malaysia - 115 items (Pos Malaysia)
  13 New Zealand - 112 items (New Zealand Post)
  14 Tanzania - 102 items (IGPC)
  15 Gibraltar - 101 items (Royal Gibraltar Post Office)

  It is unusual for Bangladesh Post to appear in this list - the large number of stamps released this year is mainly due to the remarkable issue of 71 stamps and 18 miniature sheets which had an important political purpose to highlight the horrific genocide and war crimes which took place in the country in 1971.
   It is shocking that Royal Mail and Australia Post are so highly placed in the list with such large numbers of issued stamps but we are not at all surprised to find that the two remaining Stamperija Commonwealth client territories occupy the top two places in the list. For the first time in several years the top place is not occupied by Mozambique which, it increasingly looks likely, seems to have severed its links with the outrageous Stamperija. It is interesting too, to discover how few IGPC client territories make it into the top 15 list. 
  The high positions of the the offshore British Crown and Overseas Territories in the list is also very disappointing - Guernsey, Jersey and Isle Of Man now seem more philatelically disreputable than St. Vincent And The Grenadines, Tuvalu and Ghana which is a remarkable achievement on their part.
  The two Stamperija client states also issued large numbers of imperforate stamps and 'deluxe' sheets which could be used to swell the above figures even more but frankly, they're best ignored completely.
  We may well find that a few more stamps were issued during 2017 than we are currently aware of but I do not expect the above list to change very much more from its current state.
  
   Meanwhile the Commonwealth Philatelic entities with the least number of stamp issues are:-

  1= Anguilla (0 items)
  1= Cameroon (0)
  1= Dominica (0)
  1= Jamaica (0)
  1= Lesotho (0)
  1= Nauru (0)
  1= Nigeria (0)
  1= Rwanda (0)
  1= Saint Lucia (0)
  1= Turks And Caicos Islands (0)
  1= Zambia (0)
  12 Seychelles (1)
  13= Belize (4)
  13= Malawi (4)
  15 Brunei Darussalam (6)

  So collectors of those countries have had an easy time in 2017 as has been the case with many of the above territories for several years.

  ๐Ÿ‡ญ๐Ÿ‡ฐ Hong Kong Post released 2 issues during January 2018. The first was a set of 3 definitives using its current Scenery designs to produce 3 new values to meet new postal needs. The stamps were designed by Sherman Lai and lithographed by Enschedรฉ and perforated 13 x 14. Rating:- ***.




  Chinese New Year was commemorated on 28 January 2018 by the release of 4 stamps, 1 miniature sheet and 1 'silk' miniature sheet featuring The Year of The Dog. On the same day a miniature sheet commemorating the end of the Year of The Rooster and the beginning of the Year of The Dog was also released. 
  The issue was designed by Kan Tai-keung and lithographed by Enschedรฉ or Cartor (silk sheetlet). Hot foil stamping was also used in the printing of the miniature sheet. The stamps are perforated 13.5 x 14.5 and the 2 miniature sheets are perforated 13.5.
  The Chinese New Year issues from Hong Kong Post are always attractive and colourful and a pleasure to add to one's collection. Rating:- ****.








10 comments:

  1. The volume is incredible. I'd hate to see the cost of actually collecting the various countries, it must be impressive. For a "dying" hobby, it is fascinating the attention it gets.

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    1. Thank you for your comment Dixon. I've never got round to recording face values as stamps are issued and to do it retrospectively is just too daunting a task. Perhaps next year I will give it a try. As you say the cost must now be astronomical if anyone still exists who would seriously consider collecting 'one of everything'. And remember that Commonwealth territories only amount to about a third of the total stamp issuing entities in the world!

      If stamp collecting is dying then excessive issuing by greedy postal administrations and philatelic agencies (some of which are identified in the list) is a significant contributory factor.
      Best wishes WK.

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  2. Just learned Trinidad & Tobago have issued a souvenir sheet on the subject of 12th SDMA, whatever that is, issue date not known. Face value may be T$1.50.

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    1. Thank you eyeonwall. I think the souvenir sheet you mention must commemorate the 12th CDMA which is the 12th Conference of the Defence Ministers of The Americas. This may be an overprint as issues in recent years commemorating ministerial conferences have often taken the form of previous issues with overprints applied. I have not yet been able to find any information about this issue.

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    2. Hmm.. I already have the Defense Ministers S/S. Wonder why I am being offered it as if it were new?

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    3. This miniature sheet is mentioned in Blog 881 and was released by T and T Post in 2016. Some of these overprints seem to get to some dealers much sooner than to others so it may be that the dealer offering it now as a new issue has only just received a supply of them.

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  4. 1293 Stamps is ridiculous, can't they shut down Stamperija for good, none of their stamps even look nice and who in Sarah Leone even posts letters. Otherwise love the post and wonder if you should put your list up on Stampboards to elicit responses

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  5. IGPC is issuing less stamps the last years, as can been seen now in your 2017 list. But the face values of the stamps have doubled!
    Instead of 200 $1 stamps a year, they now issue 100 $2 stamps a year... :(

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    Replies
    1. You are correct stewie1911, IGPC's face values are notably higher though it's fair to say that most countries' face values have increased with time as postal rates increase (though IGPC's stamp face values frequently have no relationship to actual postal rates). In the past 12 months there have also been a few more stamps with locally relevant subjects especially on wildlife subjects including 'national animals' and 'national birds' but there continue to be plenty of Elvis Presley stamps or issues featuring President Trumps' visits to countries thousands of miles away from the country whose name appears on the stamps.

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