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Poll results

For decades, people have pondered the penny. Does a coin with so little value have any value at all in the U.S. economy? Does the reddish-brownish disc of copper and (mostly) zinc serve a useful purpose, perhaps even beyond its intended one?

As the New York Times reported recently, most of the pennies issued by the U.S. Mint are given out as change and then never spent. This creates an incessant demand for new pennies, so that change can be handed out in future cash transactions.

"In other words," Caity Weaver wrote for the Times, "we keep minting pennies because no one uses the pennies we mint." It's estimated there are 240 billion pennies in the U.S., the vast majority of which are sitting in coin jars, hiding beneath sofa cushions, or otherwise dormant.

To replace the lost money, the federal government literally loses money. Minting a single 1-cent coin costs more than 3 cents.

Faced with a similar dilemma, Canada phased out the use of its penny in 2013. Cash prices there are now rounded up or down to the nearest nickel or dime. Should the U.S. do the same?

No, say penny proponents. There is something very American about getting exactly the change you're entitled to. And the coin has its admirers. It's embedded in our language, our culture. The penny's portrait of Lincoln is the most reproduced piece of art on Earth

So this specie remains the most basic instrument of doing business. What's your 2 cents?

Should the U.S. phase out its use of the penny, as Canada did over a decade ago?
Yes (72%, 186 VOTES)
No (25%, 66 VOTES)
Undecided (3%, 8 VOTES)
Poll Description

For decades, people have pondered the penny. Does a coin with so little value have any value at all in the U.S. economy? Does the reddish-brownish disc of copper and (mostly) zinc serve a useful purpose, perhaps even beyond its intended one?

As the New York Times reported recently, most of the pennies issued by the U.S. Mint are given out as change and then never spent. This creates an incessant demand for new pennies, so that change can be handed out in future cash transactions.

"In other words," Caity Weaver wrote for the Times, "we keep minting pennies because no one uses the pennies we mint." It's estimated there are 240 billion pennies in the U.S., the vast majority of which are sitting in coin jars, hiding beneath sofa cushions, or otherwise dormant.

To replace the lost money, the federal government literally loses money. Minting a single 1-cent coin costs more than 3 cents.

Faced with a similar dilemma, Canada phased out the use of its penny in 2013. Cash prices there are now rounded up or down to the nearest nickel or dime. Should the U.S. do the same?

No, say penny proponents. There is something very American about getting exactly the change you're entitled to. And the coin has its admirers. It's embedded in our language, our culture. The penny's portrait of Lincoln is the most reproduced piece of art on Earth

So this specie remains the most basic instrument of doing business. What's your 2 cents?

  • 260 Votes
  • 2 Comments

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2 Comments

  • September 19, 2024

    Keep it

  • September 16, 2024

    We just need to teach our kids all over again about rounding up and down and making change. Should take a decade.