uthminsta wrote:I guess aluminum cent or no cent... and steel nickel. If no cent, then maybe an aluminum nickel.
SilverEye wrote:It's not the rising price of metals, it's the decreasing value of the dollar.
I guarantee you we will be telling our kids: We could go down to the bank and buy real copper pennies for a penny a piece! We were so crazy, we didn't even keep the zinc ones, and you know how much zinc is per ounce these days. Heck, all coins used to be made of metal back then! Oh, you don't even know what a "coin" is..
smallchange wrote:I really think that they are going to change the compo within 2012. I did not post these things for no reason. Good Hunting.
uthminsta wrote:I decided to flesh my thoughts out a little more on this. Let's see...
So the mint wants to come up with a better solution. Okay, give it a whirl. They have yet to call me to ask my opinion but i have a real solution for them.
1. STOP making cents. Continue to use them for many more years, and allow for natural attrition of the supply. There are 300 billion zinc cents already in circulation, and 300 million people in the U.S. That's 1,000 per person, and that doesn't count a single copper coin, which eventually will be gone, if our Ryedales have anything to say about it.Do NOT lift the "melt ban" until after the EVENTUAL demonetization of the cent. But demonetization should not be done for quite some time.
2. STOP making the dollar bill. USE the hundreds of millions of dollar coins sitting in the vaults. Tell the public "too bad, get used to the dollar coin." The coins cost more in the short run, but last many many MANY times as long as a dollar bill, and we all know that.
3. Make the nickel out of something like plated steel. Keep it the same size and weight, or as close as possible. Or for goodness sake, do SOMEthing to it.
Do this, and the mint would reverse their deficit. IMMEDIATELY. And yet they paid over a million bucks to a company to research possibilities. It's not that hard to figure out.
There's no GOOD option for the cent. If minting continues, the only affordable option is aluminum. It can't be plated, that has to add to the cost of minting. So jut plain aluminum. And I fear that doing that might be a worse choice than not making it. I know there is a stigma attached to either one (using cheap metal or not making it). It is believed that it will send the signal that "the US isn't doing so well. Aluminum cents mean inflation." Changing the coins is not dealing with inflation, it is just responding to it. But the truth is, inflation is here so it has to be dealt with. Leave that up to someone else besides the mint. Still, the only reason they have continued to make the cent at all is because THEY CANNOT ADMIT TO INFLATION!!! Instead they keep chugging away, losing money every time one is minted.
Imagine standing in front of one of those massive coin minting machines, hour after hour, day after day, year after year, KNOWING that even turning them on means a loss. But hey, let's keep making them!!! Billions of them! Listen to the coins being minted... tick tick tick tick tick tick tick tick tick... loss loss loss loss loss loss loss... We can't afford to be sentimental about it either! "We like the penny! It's part of our heritage!" That line of thinking doesn't work any more. And we literally can't afford to bow to the lobbyists who are pressuring us to continue buying metals from the big suppliers either. I read in the article below that they are PAYING 1.1 cents for the MATERIAL for the cent! Umm, guys, that's twice the cost of the materials in that coin. There's your problem.
...catching my breath...
Meanwhile the dollar coin, the coin which could make the most profit for the mint, if they actually USED it... Well, they've said "Hey, let's not make them any more." I know, I know... you're saying "I don't want a lot of heavy coins in my pocket, I'd rather have a dollar bill." No, no, no... once again, we can't afford to think like that. Preferences and all the "that's-not-the-way-we've-always-done-it" thinking are too expensive and, and quite frankly are terrible habits!
These choices - lack of willingness to make a change, lack of willingness to admit to inflation - they translate to a mint which has been operating at a loss since at least as far back as 2006! Shouldn't a company go out of business with those stats?
Here's the article that says it cost 1.1 cents in MATERIALS to make a cent:
http://moneyland.time.com/2012/02/15/obama-wants-to-make-cheaper-pennies-and-nickels/
I think I'm done for now. I know most of this has all been said before, but... I just had to say it. Once and for all.
Bluegill wrote:If the government decided to stop minting the cent, I feel it would fall from favor and disappear from use rather quickly. Like you mentioned, there would still be plenty of them for use during the short transition. Setting prices in 5¢ increments, and rounded taxes to the nearest 5¢ is a no brainer. There are already businesses and consumers already doing just that.
Once they were no longer needed in commerce they would end up in jars like Canadian coins do. Eventually when a person got enough, they would trade them in for other denominations at the banks. Businesses would not be giving them out for change. The ones they got as payment(if they choose to accept them) would go back to the banks. The banks would not be getting orders for them from their business customers. So they would accumulate at the banks. They would in turn send them back to the Fed via their coin processors to accumulate there. At some point they would be melted down and it's done.
The coin counters could continue to accept them for the time being. People could still use them if they can still find a willing business partner. The Cent coin would disappear into history just like the Half Cent did.
This scenario would sort itself out in very short order...
Bluegill wrote:Assuming a max of 30% of remaining circulating pennies are still Cu, that puts the 1,000 coin per person to 700.
Bluegill wrote:If the government decided to stop minting the cent, I feel it would fall from favor and disappear from use rather quickly. Like you mentioned, there would still be plenty of them for use during the short transition. Setting prices in 5¢ increments, and rounded taxes to the nearest 5¢ is a no brainer. There are already businesses and consumers already doing just that.
Once they were no longer needed in commerce they would end up in jars like Canadian coins do. Eventually when a person got enough, they would trade them in for other denominations at the banks. Businesses would not be giving them out for change. The ones they got as payment(if they choose to accept them) would go back to the banks. The banks would not be getting orders for them from their business customers. So they would accumulate at the banks. They would in turn send them back to the Fed via their coin processors to accumulate there. At some point they would be melted down and it's done.
The coin counters could continue to accept them for the time being. People could still use them if they can still find a willing business partner. The Cent coin would disappear into history just like the Half Cent did.
This scenario would sort itself out in very short order...
cesariojpn wrote:Change we can believe in!!!
uthminsta wrote:Bluegill wrote:Assuming a max of 30% of remaining circulating pennies are still Cu, that puts the 1,000 coin per person to 700.
I don't get your math on that. There are 1000 ZINC cents minted per person in the US. Assuming a 20% copper rate from our sorting, that means there should be around 1,250 coins per person. But either way, the logic is this: there are more than enough to go around at this time.
cesariojpn wrote:
I don't think so if a couple key factors are made:
1. There is no way the cent will be wiped out completely. Us Americans are a stubborn bunch.
2. I think a token mintage would at least keep both collectors satisfied while maintaining enough "replacement" coinage to replace coins either remelted or lost to the ages. There is no way we need an extra 300 million cents to be pumped into the channels every year; 50 million would be a more reasonable amount. Enough to allow people to buy coins for type sets and whatnot, yet enough to stop scalpers and hoarders from salting away coins.
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