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  • You know what they say, “even a broken penny is right twice a dollar”

    Or something like that

  • Should also drop nickels, quarters, and one dollar bills.
    We'll have dimes (should be made larger), half dollar, and one dollar coins.
    All prices can then be rounded to $0.1 instead of $0.01.

    When we got rid of hay pennies (worth half a penny) in 1857, they were worth more than $0.15 is today.
    Only reason I'd keep the dime around, is because we aren't quite ready to round prices to a whole dollar.

    • The quarter is the biggest problem with this plan. There's just too much stuff that runs on quarters and quarters themselves as a currency denomination have too much cultural staying power.

      Unfortunately, there being a 25¢ coin rather than the more globally-common 0.20 piece means that it isn't practical to retire the nickel because it will still be possible to get non-multiples of 10¢.

      $1 notes are important, not because of any reason in the US (dollar coins would work equally well in almost any application), but because the US dollar circulates widely in foreign countries that are suffering hyperinflation of their local currencies and have thus informally dollarised. There, US coinage is basically non-existent meaning the lowest denomination that can be transacted in USD cash is $1. See the situation in Zimbabwe where American banknotes circulate until they literally fall apart or the ink has all faded away off.

      So the existence of a $1 note is paramount to keeping the economies of these countries going. It would be impossible to conduct business if the smallest denomination is $5 and your $4 an hour salary is paid in cash.

      Remember, as unfortunate as it is, much of the US's monetary policy is driven by the fact that the US dollar isn't just America's currency. It's the entire world's currency.

    • Just keep one dollar bills and remove everything but quarters instead. So much easier.

      • It's not easer. It's just what your used to thinking about.

        Anything less than a quarter isn't worth your effort. And you don't see dollar coins often only because of social inertia.

  • The penny, one of the first coins made by the U.S. Mint after its establishment in 1792, now costs more than two cents to produce, Trump said in a post on his Truth Social site shortly after departing the Super Bowl game in New Orleans.

    “For far too long the United States has minted pennies which literally cost us more than 2 cents. This is so wasteful!” Trump wrote. “I have instructed my Secretary of the US Treasury to stop producing new pennies.”

    While I think that it's probably something that we should have done a long time ago, I don't think that the major cost is actually the fact that the production cost is higher than the coin's face value, but from the cost of needing to handle and process pennies.

89 comments