SilverEye wrote:I'm serious. And yes, there really are millions of people on unemployment.
At least the penny is keeping those people are working, instead of sitting on the sidelines collect a gov't check.
SilverEye wrote:I'm serious. And yes, there really are millions of people on unemployment.
At least the penny is keeping those people are working, instead of sitting on the sidelines collect a gov't check.
pennyguy wrote:SilverEye wrote:I'm serious. And yes, there really are millions of people on unemployment.
At least the penny is keeping those people are working, instead of sitting on the sidelines collect a gov't check.
What we could do, is all the people who lose there jobs from eliminating the penny
Buy them all shovels , Good for china shovel makers.Then hire half of them to dig holes
then hire the other half of them to fill in the holes.Now there are all back to work and we have good aerated
US soil.
SilverEye wrote:Has anyone run the numbers on the job losses if we eliminated the penny? From savings at the grocery store and gas station attendants, the business will save counter staff labor not having to deal with them. Armored car drivers not having to haul the heavy worthless bags around, needing fewer trucks and guards. Bank tellers not needing to swap out the penny bags. Also on the production side, that's a lot of mining and refining jobs for the zinc in those coins.
In an age where the gov't is trying to stimulate the economy and simply writing unemployment checks by the millions each month, does it really make economic sense?
creshka46 wrote:No, I get it. That's a good question. I would imagine that Coinstar would get hit pretty hard. I heard somewhere that half of all the coins that run through those machines are pennies.
Has anyone run the numbers on the job losses if we eliminated the penny? From savings at the grocery store and gas station attendants, the business will save counter staff labor not having to deal with them. Armored car drivers not having to haul the heavy worthless bags around, needing fewer trucks and guards. Bank tellers not needing to swap out the penny bags. Also on the production side, that's a lot of mining and refining jobs for the zinc in those coins.
In an age where the gov't is trying to stimulate the economy and simply writing unemployment checks by the millions each month, does it really make economic sense?
deacon wrote:This sounds like the broken window fallacy. Basically the story goes that a boy breaks a window. The glazier gets 100 dollars. He then spends said money at the tailor. The Tailor buys bread. The baker buys a cabinet. The carpenter buys something and so on. Without the window being broken, then all these people would not have earned, and then spent 100 dollars. So should we praise this boy? No we should not. The father could have spent the money to replace the window on grocerys, or video games, or silver.![]()
Instead he has to spend his money on fixing the window. What a waste.
SilverEye wrote:If coinstar didn't make money accepting the penny, they wouldn't take it. What are the fees they charge, like 9%? If they pay 8% to handle them then they are making money.
No one's job will get "easier". They get more efficient. As in, work just as hard, but get more done. What used to be a three man crew of armored car guys humping pennies around just became a two man crew, or now a crew can service 25 stops instead of 20 so fewer crews are needed. Same with everybody else up and down the supply chain.
highroller4321 wrote:. . . Its very very rare that they stop to just drop off or pick up pennies. . .
Madwest wrote:highroller4321 wrote:. . . Its very very rare that they stop to just drop off or pick up pennies. . .
. . . Unless Realcent'ers are involved.![]()
I once topped off a CoinStar kettle with cents. I had poured $471 worth of zincs in and had $150+ more waiting in the wings. I've seen the size of the coin bin in CoinStars and if I had to guess, I'd say that my dump was half or more of its capacity.
My father-in-law was getting a new $700 gas water heater from Lowes and so I went to CoinStar to get the fee-free Lowes card (and get cash from FIL) - I figured I'd give my dump banks a break. I was doing this in a medium sized town (population ~12,000) that had two CoinStar locations. One of them at a Walmart though and so I only had the one option for the Lowes card (Walmart doesn't allow any sort of competitive presence on property and so the CoinStars in Walmart do not offer Lowes, Amazon, etc).
I was there for well over an hour feeding the thing. About every 3-4 minutes the screen would say "My you have a lot of coins. Please wait while we catch up." Anyway, the internal tub filled up and then the machine started throwing cents out the reject. Eventually, a message came up that the machine needed to be serviced. I had to haul the remaining zincs back out to my car and ultimately back home with me because there wasn't another CoinStar in town that would give the Lowes cert.
Return to Copper Penny Bullion Investing
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 8 guests