uthminsta wrote:Okay, everyone. I have a question for you all. Do you collect world coins? Also known as foreign coins... coins of the world... or "a geography lesson in your pocket"
If so, tell us what country you "specialize" in, or which one you go after the most, however you want to phrase it. Interested in more than one country? Go ahead and list them, but I'm gonna challenge you to come up with a "top five" list of countries.
Then tell us all about it. How long? Favorite coin? Latest acquisition? Why (if there is a reason at all)?
Slaphot wrote:Im working on a set of one coin from every country. Been at it for a while, I add a coin here and there. I think I am at around 30% complete.
Most mint are self funded by seignorage see-- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seigniorage.pcm2007 wrote:That leads me to another question: why do most countries issue new coins every year when the coins from the previous years are still in circulation?
Pedro
Today
The "50 State" series of quarters (25-cent coins) was launched in the U.S. in 1999. The U.S. government planned on a large number of people collecting each new quarter as it rolled out of the U.S. Mint, thus taking the pieces out of circulation.[6] Each set of quarters is worth $14.00 (a complete set includes quarters for all fifty states, the five U.S. territories, and the District of Columbia). Since it costs the Mint about five cents for each 25-cent piece it produces, the government made a profit whenever someone "bought" a coin.[7] The U.S. Treasury estimates that it has earned about US$6.3 billion in seigniorage from the quarters over the course of the entire program.[8]
In some cases, national mints report the amount of seigniorage provided to their respective governments; for example, the Royal Canadian Mint reported that in 2006 it generated $C93 million in seigniorage for the Government of Canada.[9] The U.S. government, the largest beneficiary of seignorage, earned approximately $25 billion annually as of 2000.[10] For coinage only, seigniorage accruing to the U.S. Treasury per dollar issued for the fiscal year 2011 was 45 cents.[11]
henrysmedford wrote:Most mint are self funded by seignorage see-- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seigniorage.pcm2007 wrote:That leads me to another question: why do most countries issue new coins every year when the coins from the previous years are still in circulation?
PedroToday
The "50 State" series of quarters (25-cent coins) was launched in the U.S. in 1999. The U.S. government planned on a large number of people collecting each new quarter as it rolled out of the U.S. Mint, thus taking the pieces out of circulation.[6] Each set of quarters is worth $14.00 (a complete set includes quarters for all fifty states, the five U.S. territories, and the District of Columbia). Since it costs the Mint about five cents for each 25-cent piece it produces, the government made a profit whenever someone "bought" a coin.[7] The U.S. Treasury estimates that it has earned about US$6.3 billion in seigniorage from the quarters over the course of the entire program.[8]
In some cases, national mints report the amount of seigniorage provided to their respective governments; for example, the Royal Canadian Mint reported that in 2006 it generated $C93 million in seigniorage for the Government of Canada.[9] The U.S. government, the largest beneficiary of seignorage, earned approximately $25 billion annually as of 2000.[10] For coinage only, seigniorage accruing to the U.S. Treasury per dollar issued for the fiscal year 2011 was 45 cents.[11]
coindood wrote:
Why exactly did large nations like Australia, Egypt and the Philippines not issue coins that year?
Recyclersteve wrote:Think about what happened in our country in 1965. We had just cut silver out of our dimes and quarters and reduced halves from 90% silver to 40%. Also there was a coin shortage at the time as people were hoarding coins and even rolls. This could have leaked out to other countries (like Australia) when they heard what was going on here. So I can see where some would have wanted to curtail production for a while.
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