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by b112
1165 days ago
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I don't have a horse in this race, but I think what the commenter meant was, some places don't use the penny any more. In Canada, the penny is gone. It was too expensive to keep (cost of producing them is just silly, for their value of 1 cent.). So prices are just rounded when using cash: https://www.canada.ca/en/revenue-agency/programs/about-canad... In as the penny was effectively worthless even a decade ago (when this was done), it just makes sense. I can't think of a single person, or retailer, who cared. Most approved of it. So, that's probably what someone meant by the penny comment. Whether the US should do the same? I don't know. I just know it worked out very easily, and well, in Canada. |
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I don't understand this argument. A penny is not disposable. They last for decades, being used in thousands of transactions. It only has to generate more economic value in its life than it cost to produce. The face value is irrelevant.
Dropping the penny just means you changed the resolution of your currency from 100ths to 20ths. Can I still run a credit card transaction for $1.17 in Canada?
> I just know it worked out very easily, and well, in Canada.
What benefits did Canada realize with this change?