Recyclersteve wrote:Both. In my opinion I am still surprised that the penny (and to some extent, even the nickel) are still around. I've seen many times when people drop coins accidentally. They know they dropped them and don't even stoop to pick them up. That tells you several things:
1) People are lazy.
2) People don't want to look poor, even if they are. (Exception: Some older folks who just don't give a rip about how they appear.)
3) People think the coins are a nuisance to keep around, so they don't bother to go out of their way to keep them.
4) Young people don't want to embarrass themselves by scrounging for a coin. (Exception: Really small kids who get excited.)
AdamsSamoa wrote:I pick them all up..... they add up
Thogey wrote:Recyclersteve wrote:Both. In my opinion I am still surprised that the penny (and to some extent, even the nickel) are still around. I've seen many times when people drop coins accidentally. They know they dropped them and don't even stoop to pick them up. That tells you several things:
1) People are lazy.
2) People don't want to look poor, even if they are. (Exception: Some older folks who just don't give a rip about how they appear.)
3) People think the coins are a nuisance to keep around, so they don't bother to go out of their way to keep them.
4) Young people don't want to embarrass themselves by scrounging for a coin. (Exception: Really small kids who get excited.)
Minimum wage in AZ is $10.50 per hour. 1 cent every 4 seconds. It's not worth the time handling a penny. Maybe for an Indian ragpicker it would be.
Hopefully, little metal disks will go away soon.
IdahoCopper wrote:I only bend for the ring of a copper penny. The zincs remain dropped.
InfleXion wrote:Inflation is probably the biggest factor. Considering the dollar lost 99% of its buying power in a century or so, having a silver dollar back then was like having a hundred dollar bill in your pocket. And they used pennies back then. Today the dollar is what the penny used to be. I'm surprised we even still have them, but most people don't want to be on the wrong end of a rounding. That more are willing to be means there are more who don't place much value in measuring the difference between 3 cents vs. 5 cents. The most you can lose from rounding is 2 cents since it rounds to the nearest 5, and if it takes more time to count 2 cents than it does to earn 2 cents then it doesn't make fiscal sense at that point.
Robarons wrote:Local shops near me just round up and go. No problems. However they sometimes round up by a nickel too so it works out evenly in the end.
The big chains- you better have that penny or you get nothing. Imagine being 1 penny short at Walmart, that self serve U-scan is not going to budge.
The dealers here making rounding feel like your getting a deal or its casing them pain. One guy said I hate to do this but I knocking that nickel off to make the total even. But if your only making 20-50 per a silver round, etc. I understand
I do not even take the change into gold spot into consideration but they do 100%. Also largely I ignore the bid/ask spread too but they will take the bid when they buy and the ask when they sell. Note these prices are for COMEX contracts on much larger orders so it makes me think. One time I was going to buy a 1 oz Rhodium bar 'AT SPOT' so I said sure. Got my $1475 out and the dealer said yeah thats the ask price, the bid is $1525. So it felt like it was $50 over- the spreads on Rhodium are the biggest on metals. Now with it at $2120/$2270 it does not matter but at the time it did
Thogey wrote: Minimum wage in AZ is $10 per hour. 1 cent every 4 seconds. It's not worth the time handling a penny. Maybe for an Indian ragpicker it would be. Hopefully, little metal disks will go away soon.
IdahoCopper wrote:I retired completely in 2016 after I sold my jerky business. After a while, I got bored. Now I drive cars for two dealerships, wherever they need to go. Mostly its within 60 miles, but sometimes there is a good road trip. They flew me to Dallas to drive a motorhome 1500 miles back to Idaho. Another time was hauling a vehicle on a trailer to Colorado, then bring another back on the trailer.
It only pays $10 or $12 an hour, or sometimes $0.25 per mile, but I get out of the cave, meet new people and go to places I've never been. Its work any retired guy can do.
Recyclersteve wrote:IdahoCopper wrote:I retired completely in 2016 after I sold my jerky business. After a while, I got bored. Now I drive cars for two dealerships, wherever they need to go. Mostly its within 60 miles, but sometimes there is a good road trip. They flew me to Dallas to drive a motorhome 1500 miles back to Idaho. Another time was hauling a vehicle on a trailer to Colorado, then bring another back on the trailer.
It only pays $10 or $12 an hour, or sometimes $0.25 per mile, but I get out of the cave, meet new people and go to places I've never been. Its work any retired guy can do.
I've been looking to do something like that. A couple of questions for you:
1) Do they pay for stays at a hotel/motel?
2) Do you have some kind of food allowance or are you on your own regarding food?
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