1945v wrote:The penny removal campaign in Canada was not done to save money (only a meager 11 million dollars a year is saved), but rather to serve as a distraction from other more serious things that were done in the federal budget. They raised the mandatory retirement age from 65 to 67 (forcing people to work longer for less retirement benefits), but most people were focused on the removal of the penny from circulation, a rather trivial issue (except to us Realcenters

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With the penny still currently being made, in mass circulation and available at banks, the dollar can’t be devalued much more.
Now, when the penny is no longer made, no longer in mass circulation, and no longer available at banks, the dollar can be devalued much more.
With no penny, and with the cost of making the nickel currently about 2.5 cents, the dollar can be devalued to about half it’s present value, before the nickel costs the RCM money to mint.
Right now, with the penny still currently being made, in mass circulation and available at banks, if the dollar was devalued a lot, there would be a run on 98% copper pennies and even 98.4% zinc pennies. About half the pennies minted after 1999 are not magnetic and therefore are not 94% steel and most likely are 98.4% zinc.
Also, if the dollar was devalued a lot and the penny was still to be made, the cost of making even the 94% steel penny would be many, many cents, and too many cents for the RCM.
With at least 25 billion pennies in circulation, at least 250 million dollars worth of pennies, in face value, is being removed to save about $11 million per year.
“The silver is mine, and the gold is mine, saith the LORD of hosts.” (Haggai 2:8)