Tuesday, January 27, 2009

Abolish the Penny!

I would guess that virtually everyone living in the US has at one point or another been annoyed with the penny - a coin that is worth virtually nothing, hard to get rid of, and that tends to somehow accumulate in one's wallet rather quickly. Greg Mankiw has been arguing for abolishing the penny for a while and several stores in Concord, MA have recently been trying the idea. While this is obviously not a very serious issue I do think that it's a very sensible one and I think it would change things for the (ever so slightly) better:
“Being right across from the train station, we have long lines before trains leave and pennies make it worse,” said Fersch. “Further, there is a lot of lugging them from the bank, dropping them, not being able to reconcile register receipts and so on. Plus, mining zinc is an environmental nightmare, and it costs the government more to make pennies than they are worth. Finally, they have minted thousands for every man, woman and child. Where do they all go? If they were truly worth anything they wouldn’t end up in coffee cans, vacuum cleaners or sofas. It is simply a tax, which raises no revenue.”
Finland (a country generally very open to innovative ideas) followed by the Netherlands have already abolished both the 1 and 2 Euro cent coins with great success:
A survey in 2004 found a majority of citizens wanting the one and two cent coins to be withdrawn across the eurozone, support being highest for the withdrawal of the one cent coin. However, citizens in Germany were most vocal in the support of keeping the coin. At present, the three copper coins together represent 80% of all new coins minted in the eurozone.
Having visited Finland twice I have to agree that this was extremely convenient, except when trying to get 1 and 2 Euro cents for a collector friend and having to spend 10 Euro on a set of coins worth less than 4 Euro because the 2 coins are now so hard to find.

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