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邮局,顾名思义,是个从事邮电工作的部门。自从有邮电历史以来,邮局的经营范围是收发信件、包裹,后来随着电报电话的发展,亦经营这方面业务。不但我国如此,日本和世界各国也是这样,长期来基本形成这样的格局。但善于经营的日本目黑邮局却独辟蹊径,走出了传统的经营范围,开展了一种所谓“边缘”业务,那就是邮政储蓄。邮政储蓄在日本虽有百年历史了,但迅速发展时期是在近二、三十年。储蓄的发展使邮局的营业额迅速发展。现在,这项业务已扩展到全日本各地的邮局了。日本民族与中国人有相似的传统习惯,就是勤俭积蓄。你有机会进入日本的各地邮局,会看见许多家庭主妇及普通百姓进出其间。他们往往不是到邮局寄信件包裹
Post office, as the name suggests, is a department engaged in postal work. Since the history of postal services, the post office has been operating in the area of sending and receiving letters and parcels. Later, with the development of the telegraph and telephone lines, the post office also operated in this area. This is not only true in our country, but also in Japan and other countries in the world. This pattern has basically taken shape for a long time. However, the Japan-based Meguro post office, which is adept at running a business, has found its own way out of its traditional business scope by launching a so-called “marginal” business, which is postal savings. Although postal savings in Japan a hundred years, but the rapid development period is in the last two or three decades. The development of savings made the post office’s turnover grow rapidly. Now, the business has expanded to post offices across Japan. Japanese people and Chinese people have similar traditional customs, that is, thrifty savings. You have the opportunity to enter post offices throughout Japan and you will see many housewives and ordinary people coming and going. They often do not send mail parcels to the post office