PolishPunisher wrote:This article further highlighted the reasons for the U.S. to simply cease production of the penny. Currently the zinc in a penny is worth about $.006, but it cost $.0152 to make! The labor and overhead costs $.009 per penny! A composition change may not make the cost go below $.01.
hobo finds wrote:to make one for less than a cent it would need to be made of cardboard or plastic... Or made in China
VWBEAMER wrote:hobo finds wrote:to make one for less than a cent it would need to be made of cardboard or plastic... Or made in China
Sad, but true.....
hobo finds wrote:to make one for less than a cent it would need to be made of cardboard or plastic... Or made in China
BamaJoe wrote:VWBEAMER wrote:hobo finds wrote:to make one for less than a cent it would need to be made of cardboard or plastic... Or made in China
Sad, but true.....
Great - one MORE way for china to dispose of it's toxic waste.
cesariojpn wrote:Make the pennies outta lead.
NHsorter wrote:http://www.coinworld.com/articles/mint-awards-firm-contract-to-research-alterna/
I'm curious to know if anyone here has a solid idea of what they will change the composition on pennies and nickels to while still keeping the dimensions and weight the same. Seems to me like this could happen pretty fast since it has been a topic that is in the news more often lately. Does anyone know how long it took for them to make changes in the past after the enacted a study like this?
David C. Harper, Numismatic News wrote:... It will be in 2013 that Peterson will have to go back to Congress with his evaluation of the present state of American circulating coinage and what his recommendations are to fix the problems.
And there are problems.
These include a copper-coated zinc cent that costs more to produce than is recovered when the Mint is paid 1 cent by the Federal Reserve.
The 75 percent copper, 25 percent nickel coin not only costs more to produce than can be covered by its 5-cent face value, but its metallic value at 5.9 cents creates a risk of mass melting that is only countered by a Treasury regulation that makes it illegal to melt or export this denomination as well as cents. ...
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