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MrNightly
07-17-2006, 09:23 PM
Found this today while surfing msn. I believe that if the cost exceeds the profit, then it only makes sense to move on. Plus, I think that our society is progressing toward total paperless in the not to distant future, and this could be one of the real first steps.

I voted yes, the U.S. should go penniless!

What do you all think?

http://articles.moneycentral.msn.com/News/TimeToKillOffThePenny.aspx?GT1=8376

bobman1235
07-17-2006, 09:47 PM
Found this today while surfing msn. I believe that if the cost exceeds the profit, then it only makes sense to move on. Plus, I think that our society is progressing toward total paperless in the not to distant future, and this could be one of the real first steps.

I voted yes, the U.S. should go penniless!

What do you all think?

http://articles.moneycentral.msn.com/News/TimeToKillOffThePenny.aspx?GT1=8376

Whether you phase out the penny or not should have NOTHING to do with the cost to produce it. Honestly, what a ridiculous argument.

Phasing otu the penny sounds great in theory, until you actually put some thought into what a pain in the ass it would be to have to either start counting things in 5 cent increments or rounding everything. If we have no pennies, it means that NO PRICES can be non-multiples of five cents in the entire nation. I see that presenting HUGE logistics problems.

And if you think we're going to see evena MODERATELY paperless society in our lifetimes, you're out of your mind.

unc2701
07-17-2006, 10:29 PM
I've been in several countries that have currency that's close in value (some of them are even locked to our dollar) that don't have pennies. No issues there. Even better, since tax is already included in the displayed price, it's a lot easier to add things up in your head.

No prices can be non-multiples of five cents? So what? if you really think that cost, supply and demand dictate the price to within $0.025, then why does everything end in a 9?

Logistics problem? hell no! Ever notice that you don't pay tax at a movie theater? well, the tax is already in the sale price... the logistics nightmare is having to count out pennies for everyone.

mhardy6647
07-17-2006, 10:40 PM
how do you handle sales tax? Round up? Round down? I don't think so, Tim.

PolkThug
07-17-2006, 10:54 PM
Keep the penny or all retailers will round up. Since I don't own my own business I want the penny.

Vr3MxStyler2k3
07-17-2006, 10:56 PM
I cant stand pennies.

janmike
07-17-2006, 11:01 PM
It will not happen. The monetary value will not cease to exist but a more cost effective method or material may be implemented.

madmax
07-17-2006, 11:03 PM
Time to cash in those pennies before they become worthless. Oh wait, they already are...
madmax

cfrizz
07-17-2006, 11:32 PM
Get rid of the annoying little buggers!

brettw22
07-17-2006, 11:40 PM
Eliminating it will mean that most states will raise the sales tax. States that charge 8.25% tax would no longer be able to collect the 3.25 cents per dollar, so I predict that they'd up the tax to a flat 10%. Elimination of the penny will cost the consumers more IMO.

wingnut4772
07-18-2006, 12:16 AM
Eliminating it will mean that most states will raise the sales tax. States that charge 8.25% tax would no longer be able to collect the 3.25 cents per dollar, so I predict that they'd up the tax to a flat 10%. Elimination of the penny will cost the consumers more IMO.
Agreed.

MrNightly
07-18-2006, 12:17 AM
Whether you phase out the penny or not should have NOTHING to do with the cost to produce it. Honestly, what a ridiculous argument.

Phasing otu the penny sounds great in theory, until you actually put some thought into what a pain in the ass it would be to have to either start counting things in 5 cent increments or rounding everything. If we have no pennies, it means that NO PRICES can be non-multiples of five cents in the entire nation. I see that presenting HUGE logistics problems.

And if you think we're going to see evena MODERATELY paperless society in our lifetimes, you're out of your mind.

Your opinion duly noted.

And tell me how this is such a ridiculous argument that if it cost 1.23 cents to make 1 cent, the country is going further into debt just to make money. How on earth is that ridiculous? And if you noticed from the article, if the penny was no longer produced, than the nickel wouldn't be far behind. So, the smallest "Coin" would be a dime. But of course, you would still be able to use credit / debit / wireless cash / whatever else may come, with no restrictions on the amount.

I vote yes! We gain nothing, by clinging to the past. Let's march onward and discover what the future holds!

brettw22
07-18-2006, 12:21 AM
IF 'marching forward' means that the price for goods or services doesn't arbitrarily jump to compensate, then so be it. I find it hard to believe that state or federal agencies are goign to drop the tax to a flat 5% though.

MrNightly
07-18-2006, 12:25 AM
IF 'marching forward' means that the price for goods or services doesn't arbitrarily jump to compensate, then so be it. I find it hard to believe that state or federal agencies are goign to drop the tax to a flat 5% though.

See, I don't get how the tax rate will naturally jump or fall simply because a "Type" of currency is no longer in use. All it is doing, is getting us to move away from a "hands on cash" to a virtual dollar. How will that effect the local taxes / federal agencies?

PolkThug
07-18-2006, 12:27 AM
Why are they still making pennies? Aren't there enough in circulation already?

F1nut
07-18-2006, 01:58 AM
See, I don't get how the tax rate will naturally jump or fall simply because a "Type" of currency is no longer in use. All it is doing, is getting us to move away from a "hands on cash" to a virtual dollar. How will that effect the local taxes / federal agencies?

Say you're buying something that costs $206.00 and the sales tax is 6%, which brings the total to $218.36. Do you think for one freakin' second that the state is going to round that down to $218.35 or drop the sales tax to 5%!?! Hell no, they'll either round it up to $218.40 or bump the sales tax to an "even" 10%. Eff that.

Without cash how are you going to handle a private business transaction? Do you think we're all going to carry card swipes??? Ridiculous!

bobman1235
07-18-2006, 08:12 AM
See, I don't get how the tax rate will naturally jump or fall simply because a "Type" of currency is no longer in use. All it is doing, is getting us to move away from a "hands on cash" to a virtual dollar. How will that effect the local taxes / federal agencies?

First of all, you can't have a differnet pricing structure for non-cash vs cash. That just wouldn't fly. "Oh, we don't have pennies anymore,s o if you pay in credit you have to pay the three cents but if you don't we'll round". In my industry we call that a hack. If a certain "cost" exists, you should be able to create it in cash.

The whole idea of rounding in general seems bad to me. Someone's losing money on the deal.

And tell me how this is such a ridiculous argument that if it cost 1.23 cents to make 1 cent, the country is going further into debt just to make money.

They're nto making one cent. It's not like every time they make a penny it gets used once and thrown away. Every time they photocopy a tax document it probably costs a penny or more, and those are worth nothing! Abolish tax documents... oh wait, that sounds like a good idea.

No prices can be non-multiples of five cents? So what? if you really think that cost, supply and demand dictate the price to within $0.025, then why does everything end in a 9?

Psychology. How many times have yous een a price that said "19.99" and said "well, it's less than 20 bucks". Or 8.99 and someone says "Hey, it's only 8 dollars!". I don't think it has anything to do with supply and demand and everything to do with logistics. If you're ok with some kind of hacked together rounding system, th en fine, it's a good idea. If costs just have to suddenly be on 5 cent boundaries.... well every hike in gas prices is gonna hurt that much more.

heiney9
07-18-2006, 09:20 AM
Your opinion duly noted.

And tell me how this is such a ridiculous argument that if it cost 1.23 cents to make 1 cent, the country is going further into debt just to make money. How on earth is that ridiculous? And if you noticed from the article, if the penny was no longer produced, than the nickel wouldn't be far behind. So, the smallest "Coin" would be a dime. But of course, you would still be able to use credit / debit / wireless cash / whatever else may come, with no restrictions on the amount.

I vote yes! We gain nothing, by clinging to the past. Let's march onward and discover what the future holds!

So you're saying the "cash" price could be more than if you used a debit/credit card. Let's see total bill comes to $17.56. If you use cash you'd have to pay $17.60 (no pennies anymore) but if you used paperless then you could pay $17.56. Why on Earth would that be desirable? Can you imagine the accounting costs involved?

The Gov't is not loosing money making money. It's a function of Gov't ( a cost of doing business so to speak). There are many many things the Gov't does that loose money. Profit and loss are not an issue when it comes to the basic functions the Gov't needs to perform. There are many other programs/incomes that offset the cost of producing money. Sure if you break it down by each single solitary penny produced it doesn't look good (from a cost to produce), but we're better off with a 1c coin, perhaps not copper anymore.

H9

Vr3MxStyler2k3
07-18-2006, 10:00 AM
Lets have a 1 cent coin made out of... Chrome!

No No... Carbon Fiber... or PLASTIC (seems we like that alot) - or recycled milk jugs!

tommyboy
07-18-2006, 10:08 AM
Sure if you break it down by each single solitary penny produced it doesn't look good (from a cost to produce), but we're better off with a 1c coin, perhaps not copper anymore.

H9

exactly, don't get rid of the penny, just change into a different material to make it cheaper to produce. problem solved.

unc2701
07-18-2006, 10:21 AM
HOLY SHIT!!!! PEOPLE IT'S NOT THAT COMPLICATED!!!!

Look, you dump the penny. Tax is included in all the displayed prices. The store takes the till at the end of the day and takes 6% of that, if that's what your sales tax is.

So, lets say an item costs $8.99, currently. With 6% sales tax, that's 9.53. The store decides whether they want to go with $9.55 or $9.50 for psychological reasons (Cause the .99 in 8.99 is artificial, anyway). At the end of the day, the store has sold $12,345.80 worth of merchandise, so they send the state 12,345.80*0.06= $740.748. Oh hell, in my example, the store gets screwed for $0.002, but the most the store is gonna get screwed out of is $0.025... and over a year's profits, that really doesn't matter.

Incidentally, they already do round up & down and you just don't notice.

Most stores are set up with barcodes and a big database of prices, so changing all the prices, really isn't that hard.

There's NO cash price, no credit price and you don't have to do the taxes in your head.

Seriously, just go to a country where they don't have pennies. It works fine.

Willow
07-18-2006, 10:23 AM
I head somewhere that pennies are not made of pure copper, just coated with it. Can't remember what was the make-up of it but I do remember them saying it was copper coated.

unc2701
07-18-2006, 10:25 AM
exactly, don't get rid of the penny, just change into a different material to make it cheaper to produce. problem solved.


They already did that once in the 80's. Break a penny in half- they're zinc on the inside.

and incidentally, that was a major pain, since they had to come up with a method that would result in the penny having the exact same weight and magnetic qualities for vending purposes (not so much an issue now).

bobman1235
07-18-2006, 10:37 AM
HOLY SHIT!!!! PEOPLE IT'S NOT THAT COMPLICATED!!!!

Look, you dump the penny. Tax is included in all the displayed prices. The store takes the till at the end of the day and takes 6% of that, if that's what your sales tax is.

So, lets say an item costs $8.99, currently. With 6% sales tax, that's 9.53. The store decides whether they want to go with $9.55 or $9.50 for psychological reasons (Cause the .99 in 8.99 is artificial, anyway). At the end of the day, the store has sold $12,345.80 worth of merchandise, so they send the state 12,345.80*0.06= $740.748. Oh hell, in my example, the store gets screwed for $0.002, but the most the store is gonna get screwed out of is $0.025... and over a year's profits, that really doesn't matter.

Incidentally, they already do round up & down and you just don't notice.

Most stores are set up with barcodes and a big database of prices, so changing all the prices, really isn't that hard.

There's NO cash price, no credit price and you don't have to do the taxes in your head.

Seriously, just go to a country where they don't have pennies. It works fine.

Wow, you solved the problem in one specific type of retail store. Good for you. Apply it to gas prices now.

And I really don' tunderstand why you keep rolling this sales tax thing in with pennies. Talk about a non-sequitur.

It's pretty easy to look at things ina simplistic way and say "it works!" and call everyone who disagrees a moron. It's much harder to think of all the ways it will be a pain in the ASS and all of the things it will break.

unc2701
07-18-2006, 10:43 AM
Gas prices:
They ALREADY round up and down on pennies. Ever notice how the price include tenths of a cent? Now they'll just round up and down in $0.05 increments. In the long run, everyone breaks even.

1)The sales tax thing is just another example of where rounding already occurs
2)People bring up the sales tax whenever you talk about getting rid of pennies (see above)
3)It's a stupid pain in the ass that sales tax isn't include in the displayed price, unlike many places outside th US.

dorokusai
07-18-2006, 11:05 AM
I have more important things to worry about than the life and times of the penny. Who cares.

bobman1235
07-18-2006, 11:07 AM
Fair enough. My only point is that the logistics nightmare it would cause, adn teh billions it would cost (and I'm sure it woudl cost billions) to implement this change nationwide, is more than it woudl be worth to make the switch to save maybe a million dollars a year in minting costs.

And now to ease some of the tension this thread has caused, here are some fun penny facts! (http://www.pennies.org/pennyfacts.html) :



* The Mint estimates that it will issue 8.7 billion pennies in fiscal year 2006.

* The U.S. one-cent coin is 19 millimeters in diameter and weighs 2.5 grams. (See also coin specifications via the U.S. Mint.)

* The composition of the penny is 97.5% zinc and 2.5 % copper.

* There have been 11 different designs featured on the penny.

* Since its beginning, the U.S. Mint has produced over 288.7 billion pennies. Lined up edge to edge, these pennies would circle the earth 137 times. (Figures are est.)

* The average penny lasts 25 years.

* The most "expensive" penny is a rare one minted in 1793. Only four are known to exist today and their worth is estimated at more than $275,000.

* An average of 1,040 pennies are produced every second, adding up to 30 million a day. (Figures are est.)

* During its early penny-making years, the U.S. Mint was so short on copper that it accepted copper utensils, nails and scrap from the public to melt down for the coins.

* The Lincoln penny was the first U.S. coin to feature a historic figure. President Abraham Lincoln has been on the penny since 1909, the 100th anniversary of his birth.

* The Lincoln penny was the first cent on which appeared the words "In God We Trust."

* About half of all coins produced by the U.S. Mint are pennies. (See also coin production figures via the U.S. Mint.

Demiurge
07-18-2006, 12:01 PM
There are much more important things to worry about, which is why I agree with Bobman and wouldnt' change a thing. Shifting the system is harder when it's been in place for so long than it is starting off without it. Pennies are more complex than just getting rid of. In the end it only costs the consumer and taxpayer more to get rid of it.

brettw22
07-18-2006, 12:21 PM
Most stores are set up with barcodes and a big database of prices, so changing all the prices, really isn't that hard.This is flat out wrong. These barcodes don't create themselves.....Companies have departments exclusively to change/add/delete these individual bar codes and the properties of each (item cost, tax rate, description, etc etc). You can make an oversweeping change to the tax rate (a generic system wide), but if the solution is to alter the retail price of every item (not a generic number) to make it consistent with a flat 5% increment, every bar code will have to be manually altered. Every store that I set up contained on average about 85,000 bar codes, with grocery stores going upwards of about 250,000 - 300,000 bar codes per store.

unc2701
07-18-2006, 12:28 PM
This is flat out wrong. These barcodes don't create themselves.....Companies have departments exclusively to change/add/delete these individual bar codes and the properties of each (item cost, tax rate, description, etc etc). You can make an oversweeping change to the tax rate (a generic system wide), but if the solution is to alter the retail price of every item (not a generic number) to make it consistent with a flat 5% increment, every bar code will have to be manually altered. Every store that I set up contained on average about 85,000 bar codes, with grocery stores going upwards of about 250,000 - 300,000 bar codes per store.

Huh? are you saying that when rice crispies go on sale, they put a different barcode on it?

brettw22
07-18-2006, 12:37 PM
First of all, barcodes are generated by the govt for specific items and certain numbers within the barcode identify the manufacturer.

For an example, I'll use Rice Cakes instead of Rice Crispies.

I'm saying that the pricing department makes the decision to put that item on sale, they get into the database, alter the price for that particular flavor of rice cake. Because there's plain, butter, carmel corn, cheddar, etc etc, they have to go into each individual bar code file and alter the price.

Another aspect that most people don't think of or know is that just because Rice Cakes are $1.99 at a store in your neighborhood doesn't mean they're that much elsewhere. Most companies have different pricing tiers that they categorize markets across the country into so it's ultimately possible that the cakes cost 4 different prices across the country.

Complicating it even more, Safeway, Wal-Mart, Albertsons, Kroger, Cub Foods, Dominick's, Acme, etc etc all have their own pricing structure in place for the same items.

Even if the solution is to round the tax rate, companies are going to have to alter their pricing structure to provide an end result in increments of $.05, mandating them to alter all barcode files in their systems.

krabby5
07-18-2006, 12:54 PM
Although I think pennies are a pain in the ass, I can see both sides..

However, when i buy a receiver that is marked $1199, I think it's a silly marketing ploy that I have to wait until I check out to find out the REAL price, which includes taxes...why can't the price just say $1276.95 and be done with it?

PhantomOG
07-18-2006, 12:55 PM
I'd rather see people stop writing checks for $10 at the grocery store first.

Demiurge
07-18-2006, 12:57 PM
They still do that even with Debit cards?

brettw22
07-18-2006, 01:04 PM
If you're asking me Demi, the answer is yes. End form of payment doesn't at all affect the price mandated on the shelf.

unc2701
07-18-2006, 01:30 PM
Even if the solution is to round the tax rate, companies are going to have to alter their pricing structure to provide an end result in increments of $.05, mandating them to alter all barcode files in their systems.

Ehhh... you can batch process damn near anything. I'm not saying it would be easy, but I am saying that you're not going to have someone going through 300,000 files.


oh and phantom- I'm with you. I got stuck behind someone paying for a pack of gum with a check the other day.

brettw22
07-18-2006, 01:48 PM
You can systematically wide alter the tax rate as every barcode file points to the same tzx file........but the only time that pricing is altered en masse within a department is if they mandate a certain percentage off sale for the department. That in and of itself won't bring the item price in line with what would be required for a rounded amount as pricing within departments isn't all the same.

Demiurge
07-18-2006, 01:52 PM
If you're asking me Demi, the answer is yes. End form of payment doesn't at all affect the price mandated on the shelf.

I meant the people who still write $10 checks even though we have debit cards and banks that don't charge for using them. Sorry, should have quoted PhantomOG.

krabby5
07-18-2006, 02:04 PM
I'd rather see people stop writing checks for $10 at the grocery store first.

I must be in the hood, because no one accepts checks anymore..I can't believe you can still use checks....too easy to commit fraud..

all you have to do is take a check from a customer, copy down the ABA number and account number...order checks from the internet with that info, sans the name..in place of original name, put some foreign name as the check holder...."deposit" $1000 into that account, while at the same time withdrawing $500....you can sign the check as "deposit to the account of...."

you now have $500 and the original customer is stuck..

I should know...it happened to me years ago..

bobman1235
07-18-2006, 02:05 PM
I meant the people who still write $10 checks even though we have debit cards and banks that don't charge for using them. Sorry, should have quoted PhantomOG.

Ugh, yes. I see people do it all the time. The elderly I can understand, kind of, they're just set in their ways. But when I see a younger woman doing it, I just want to stab. It's so ridiculous, I don't understand why the supermarkets don't just make a policy that either charges someone for using checks or bans them altogether. I actually confronted a woman about it once when I was ina particularly foul mood and she was taking way too long. "It's ok, ma'am, we can all wait for you to balance your checkbook." Selfish morons.

F1nut
07-18-2006, 03:39 PM
I don't know guys, I've seen people write a check faster than others using a card. Maybe practice some patience in your lives.

PhantomOG
07-18-2006, 03:46 PM
I don't know guys, I've seen people write a check faster than others using a card. Maybe practice some patience in your lives.

well if it was even close to a majority were writing fast I wouldn't complain. However 99.99999% of check writers I've had the pleasure of being behind take a day and a half to write the check and then another day or two to log the check before getting out of the way.

With almost all major banks having websites that instantly post debit purchases online, I just don't understand the desire to carry a check book over a debit card. The liability is the same or worse for a checkbook, and if you are truly worried, you should be using a credit card only.

bobman1235
07-18-2006, 03:53 PM
Patience goes against everything I stand for.... :)

cubdog
07-18-2006, 04:51 PM
Without pennies I'd be broke.

cubdog

Fireman32
07-18-2006, 05:15 PM
without pennies i would not have anything to chuck at people that cut me off. penny bounces off a windshield nicely.

Demiurge
07-18-2006, 05:26 PM
without pennies i would not have anything to chuck at people that cut me off. penny bounces off a windshield nicely.

They do one hell of a job to a paint job on a car too. :mad: