Check out the following video posted on another thread called "What A Waste!" by Contradiction:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K00tU8O7_PU
Curiously, at around the 3:27 mark the person narrating the video says that in the 1970's our government used to pay $125 for $100 of pennies! I have heard about the so-called Penny Shortage of 1974.
Does anyone know if this was true? Can anyone find anything definitive on the internet to document this? I tried some searches using Bing and Google with no luck. But I was struggling with what to type to find good results on this one. Maybe somebody else will have better luck.
I'm thinking that for anybody who wants to be able to sell pennies at a profit (especially copper ones), this would be valuable information to have. Also, if that really did happen, I could see the mint suspending production of the cent for a year as an experiment to save money and gauge if people wouldn't mind either selling pennies at a profit or having them removed altogether (a la Canada back in 2012)- there were other coins that had years with zero production, especially nickels, dimes, quarters, halves and dollars in the 1930's during the Great Depression.
If somebody took a vote, I imagine the majority of people would prefer the penny be gone. The "give a penny- take a penny" cups at cash registers are testament to this.
Perhaps, for someone who has his books, Q. David Bowers published something about this. Maybe there is a good quote in one of them. He sure has written a ton of stuff about seemingly everything numismatic.