Postcode lottery
Template:Short description Template:About {{SAFESUBST:#invoke:Unsubst||date=__DATE__ |$B= {{#switch: |Category=For categories please use the templates available at Wikipedia:Categories for discussion. |Template=For templates please use the templates available at Wikipedia:Templates for discussion. }}Template:Mbox{{#switch: ||Talk=Template:DMC |User|User talk= |#default={{#if:||Template:DMC}}}}Template:Merge partner }} In the United Kingdom, the postcode lottery is the unequal provision of services such as healthcare, education and insurance prices depending on the geographic area or postcode. Postcodes can directly affect the services an area can obtain, such as insurance prices. Despite having many non-postal uses, postcodes are only determined based on Royal Mail operations and bear little relation to local government boundaries. More broadly, there is an unequal provision of services around the country, especially in public services,<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> such as access to cancer drugs in the healthcare system<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> or quality of education.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> These are more likely to be a result of local budgets and decision-making than actual postcodes.
Postcodes were devised solely for the purposes of sorting and directing mail and rarely coincide with political boundaries. However, over time they have become a geographical reference in their own right with postcodes and postcode groups becoming synonymous with certain towns and districts. Further to this, the postcode has been used by organisations for other applications including government statistics, marketing, calculation of car and household insurance premiums and credit referencing.
Changing postcodesEdit
There are several groups, mostly on the fringes of major population centres, who are affected in one way or another by the associations of their postcode. There is a movement in the Royal Borough of Windsor and Maidenhead to change the first two characters of their postcodes from Template:Postcode to WM for vanity, so as not to be associated with Slough.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> A businessman in Ilford wishes to have the postcode district of Template:Postcode changed to Template:Postcode as he claims customers do not realise his business is based in Greater London.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>Template:Importance inline
Some residents of West Heath in Template:Postcode asked to have their postcodes changed to that of adjacent Bexleyheath, citing higher insurance premiums as reason to change.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Some residents of Kingston Vale in Template:Postcode wish to have their postcodes changed to adjacent Kingston upon Thames for the same reasonsTemplate:Citation needed.
In all these cases Royal Mail has said that there is "virtually no hope" of changing the postcode, referring to their policy of changing postcodes only to match changes in their operations.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Under this policy residents of the Wirral Peninsula had their postcodes changed from the Template:Postcode (Liverpool) to Template:Postcode (Chester) group when a new sorting office was opened.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Some postcode areas straddle England's borders with Wales and Scotland. Examples of such postcodes include Template:Postcode, Template:Postcode, Template:Postcode and Template:Postcode. This has led to British Sky Broadcasting subscribers receiving the wrong BBC and ITV regions, and newly licensed radio amateurs being given incorrect call signs.
Extended use of postcodesEdit
The Postal Services Commission says the following regarding the extended use of postcodes and the Postcode Address File (PAF):