Share.

    22 Comments

    1. damn, I knew the nickel also cost more to make than face value, just like the penny, but I had no idea it was *that* much more(I thought it was like 6-8¢ per).

    2. The face value is not necessarily a good comparison when determining if a coin is worth making, because a quarter’s value to society is not 25 cents. A coin is simply a tool for facilitating exchange.

      I have no idea how to get the total value to society of a coin, but you could approximate the value to the government by taking

      – average lifespan of a coin in years

      – average number of times a coin is used a year

      – average tax collected per use

      Just guessing that coins last 30 years, are used every month, and generate 5% of their value each time, a coin generates 72x its face value in revenue during its lifetime.

      Of course, that doesn’t mean there aren’t better options, such as a phone that you’re going to have anyways, but if people want to use cash then the government is still “up” by letting them do it.

    3. Canada ditched the penny years ago. Legitimately, why is it necessary? We also passed a law, so all cash purchases are rounded to the nearest nickle. So much better.

    4. Fun fact, in 1857 we stopped minting the US half-cent coin, as its buying power was low enough to be deemed not necessary. It had the buying power of what would currently be about 18 cents.

    5. Unhappy_Poetry_8756 on

      Let’s just get rid of all coins. Round to the nearest dollar and call it a day.

    6. Maybe worth it. You don’t want your entire life saving digitized. One keystroke and you are homeless.

    7. an_adventuringhobbit on

      Jobs, there are jobs here, this isn’t tax corruption. It’s technically a part of being civilized.

    8. Interesting comparison but the underlying implication is not necessarily a relevant argument. Cost of production/distribution against face value are relatively meaningless when taking into account for why we create physical currency. It’s purpose exists as a service to enable the smooth flow of cash transactions throughout the United States.

      If we were to start printing thousand dollar bills again, would that be a better use of the mint since it would be a better ROI? No, because the mint would be failing in its goal of smooth and efficient currency transactions as no one would use thousand dollar bills. We’d probably save even more money if we digitized the whole system and did away with physical currency altogether but that’s not the point. The mint is a service not a business.

    9. The cost to mint a coin isn’t a good metric. You could mint a $250 coin for 5 cents, but that’s not a useful denomination for coins. A quarter might cost 15 cents, but it can be used in hundreds of transactions over its useful life. The better metric is how useful the coin is. The penny is useless. It’s so useless that people throw them away. It’s more useful as a weight than a coin.

    10. While the cost of the penny and nickel are higher than their value, I no longer argue that that’s the reason we should stop making them. A coin can be used multiple times, many more than a dollar bill due to wear and tear alone. So if you multiple the nominal value of a coin times the number of times it changes hands, you probably will far exceed the cost it took to make that coin.

      The problem with pennies and nickels is that they don’t change hands enough times anymore to be worth it. Pennies and nickels cost people time and effort to store them, only to maybe never use them unless it’s convenient. I suspect that most people, when given a penny or nickel, will never use the penny or nickel. It’ll get lost in the sofa, the car seats, or just straight up abandoned. They no longer provide enough utility to society to justify their continued usage.

    11. What is the circulation time on the coins. Yep a penny costs alot to make. How long does it last? How about paper money how much and how long does it circulate?

      Personally, I’d like to see a $5 coin and such to reduce printing costs.

    12. Other places have gotten rid of them, and they’re just fine. (source – I live in NZ now, they don’t have them, it’s great)

    13. So the phrase should actually be “they penny and nickel you to death” since those have the huge hidden costs and are therefore worth less than what you get.