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subharmonicon | 1 year ago

Making fewer pennies means needing more nickels. Which have an even larger loss per unit: https://www.cnn.com/2025/02/10/business/cost-to-make-penny-n...

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black6|1 year ago

Why would we need more nickels? Transactions will end up being rounded to the nearest nickel, which will end up being a dime on one side or a nickel on the other as the smallest necessary coin. Seems like it all evens out.

whynotmaybe|1 year ago

Both will be used more, the issue with the nickel is that it costs around 14ยข to make one.

MadcapJake|1 year ago

All of the "more nickels" noise is being paid for by the penny copper supplier.

JohnFen|1 year ago

The penny is mostly zinc. It's only 2.5% copper.

Interestingly, the nickel is 75% copper -- so copper suppliers would strongly prefer to ditch the penny if it meant making more nickels.

Cerium|1 year ago

Keep going! We only need the quarter.

marbro|1 year ago

We need to stop minting pennies and nickels. We could stop inflation by restoring the gold standard but nobody seems to mind inflation that much.

clejack|1 year ago

Getting rid of pennies/nickels sure, but where does the gold standard come in?

You want to tie the economy to a material that doesn't capture economic growth and which also has its remaining stores in areas of the world not owned by your nation?

If Google wasn't lying to me with its response, the current USA gdp is over $20 trillion, and the US owns around $200 billion in gold.

Wouldn't tying gold to the current economy either devalue the dollar or inflate the current value of gold before locking the country into a state of economic stagnation?