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Canada ditches the penny

238 pointsby codergirlabout 13 years ago

18 comments

mmastracabout 13 years ago
This line-item is basically a smokescreen for cutting all sorts of other important things (like the research tax credit, SR&#38;ED; various social programs; the budget for our national broadcaster, the CBC; and the salary of the Chief Electoral Officer):<p><a href="http://www.reddit.com/r/canada/comments/rjrfn/the_budget_5_billion_in_cuts_over_3_years_and/" rel="nofollow">http://www.reddit.com/r/canada/comments/rjrfn/the_budget_5_b...</a><p>Amusingly this particular cut was actually a private member proposal from the NDP (the left-most mainstream party).
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kmmabout 13 years ago
A brilliant decision. Now if we could only get rid of our 1 euro cent here.<p>According to some inflation figures I quickly found on the internet, a (US dollar) penny had a hundred years ago 23 times as much buying power as a penny nowadays. That means the smallest denomination was then was worth almost as much as a quarter is now! People could get by without smaller coins then and they should be able to work perfectly fine now without worthless pennies.
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taitemsabout 13 years ago
Just as a point of interest, Australia removed the 1 and 2 cent coins from circulation back in 1992. Prices have been rounded to the nearest 5 cent value when paying with cash ever since. A comment on this thread said that it's madness, but it's all someone my age has grown up with.
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alanhabout 13 years ago
Reminds me of an anecdote about a woman who balanced her checkbook by rounding all amounts to the nearest dollar. Her father eventually heard about this, freaked out, and re-tallied everything — and ended up within a dollar of her previously-computed balance.
randletabout 13 years ago
"They cost more to produce than they are worth, nobody likes them, they have no commercial value."<p>My very first (very primitive) public facing webpage was dedicated to abolishing the Canadian penny. Good riddance!
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damncabbageabout 13 years ago
"And some old adages will likely fade away, too."<p>Australia hasn't had pennies since the sixties and we still use phrases like "in for a penny, in for a pound."
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ww520about 13 years ago
Does that mean pricing psychology would work differently? 19.99 would be out of fashion?
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dholowiskiabout 13 years ago
I suspect that POS software vendors will make billions of pennies selling upgrades.
kitcarabout 13 years ago
I wonder how this will affect sales taxation, as the tax rate isn't a multiple of 5 in all provinces, and hence the amount of tax collected on a purchase will have to be either be rounded down or up.
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mericabout 13 years ago
Now is a good time to buy up all the pennies for cheap. Melt them down the day they're abolished and sell it all as scrap metal (or don't sell if you think it'll hold value like gold does).
CrystalKooabout 13 years ago
Great in a way that it costs more money to produce a penny than what it's worth.
baltcodeabout 13 years ago
This is simply patching over the underlying problem - dilution in the money supply. There is no reason why countries like the US and Canada who have only become a lot wealthier in the last 200 years should have such inflation. Stop printing money, and the penny will remain valuable!
vakselabout 13 years ago
i wonder if Canada has that bit, where the prices you see in the store are the final prices(i..e with tax already calculated in)
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jstalinabout 13 years ago
The glory of central banking.<p><a href="http://coinflation.com/" rel="nofollow">http://coinflation.com/</a>
jowiarabout 13 years ago
Ridiculously simple solution: Drop the hundredths place entirely. Kill pennies, nickels, quarters, bring back $.5 pieces.<p>A tenth of a dollar is enough precision for any realistic transaction in the United States.
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maeon3about 13 years ago
Is the ditching of the penny an alarming event like the addition of a zero on the largest denomination of currency? Why do I work hard to exchange my labor for money that is being inflated on purpose?
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Nesterovabout 13 years ago
The beginning of the end.
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seanmccannabout 13 years ago
<i>If the customer has the pennies, they can use them. Payments with debit or credit cards, or cheques, can also be to the penny. But if the customer is paying cash and doesn't have the pennies, the total will go up or down to the nearest nickel. For example, $1.02 will become $1 and $1.03 will be $1.05.</i><p>Something just feels wrong about rounding. The customer would always get screwed. They should solve this problem by using the federal sales tax to round up/down. $1.25 + 5% = 5¢ of tax instead of 6.25¢.<p>That said, it would make sense for merchants to round down for cash purchases. It would be a tiny incentive to use cash rather than credit cards (which cost the merchant 2-4%)
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