Sexy Friends Toronto

Finally: we're getting rid of the penny!!!

hairyfucker

Turgid Member
Sep 10, 2005
1,550
3
38
yes
nickel for your thoughts.

I love money. No matetr how much. Give me a penny and I will take it.
 

Buick Mackane

Active member
Mar 1, 2012
5,448
5
38
Will hourly wages be rounded to the 5 cent mark and not be fixed at some one cent .01 point? The average person works 2000 hours a year and .04 cents an hour is $80. I don't work hourly but would gladly accept $80 more a year.
Only the actual penny will be eliminated, I don't think they plan on removing the digit. Your pay would only be affected if you get paid in cash.
Same if you buy items using your debit card, I think you'll still get figures like $61.54 which won't be rounded up unless an actual penny was involved.

I could be wrong, but this would make cents to me. :wink:
 

basketcase

Well-known member
Dec 29, 2005
61,307
6,665
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In the article it says it will round down or up if its 91-92 cents it will go down to 90 cents, and if its 93-94 it will go up to 95 cents.
It also says it will be left up to businesses to figure out how it will work.
 

Mod100

Super Moderator
Feb 18, 2010
2,226
1
0
Pennies we don't want to see go:

From "the Big Bang Theory"

Seth, Fred's going to be ticked with you posting pics of his girlfriend.
 

Thunderballs

New member
Sep 18, 2002
2,098
14
0
Toronto
Why is it a penny for your thoughts but you have to put your 2 cents in? Somebody's making a penny.

- Steven Wright
 

hairyfucker

Turgid Member
Sep 10, 2005
1,550
3
38
yes
Only the actual penny will be eliminated, I don't think they plan on removing the digit. Your pay would only be affected if you get paid in cash.
Same if you buy items using your debit card, I think you'll still get figures like $61.54 which won't be rounded up unless an actual penny was involved.

I could be wrong, but this would make cents to me. :wink:
You are technically correct but I was trying to make a (1 cent) point.
 

lamgos

New member
Dec 14, 2010
415
0
0
what's gonna happen with penny slot machines?
 

nuprin001

Member
Sep 12, 2007
925
1
18
1.5 cents to make a penny, makes sense to me.
You do understand that the cost to produce a penny being more than a penny's worth isn't a major consideration in and of itself, right?

I mean, yes, it does matter what it costs to produce a penny, but the fact that it's more than $0.01 isn't what's at issue. For the government, the value is in the circulation of the penny. It costs more than US $1 to produce a US $1 bill. Back when you guys had them, it cost more than CAD $1 to produce a CAD $1 bill. The decision to switch to the loonie wasn't because the CAD $1 cost more than CAD $1, it was because a coin would be more durable and could circulate more before being replaced. What's important to an economy is how much the money circulates. It's important to keep the overall cost of producing coinage/paper money down only because the actual coinage/paper money in and of itself doesn't have intrinsic value. It's only important to grease the wheels to allow an economy to move better.

Scrapping the penny is a very small thing, but if your government feels like doing it bully for them.
 

fuji

Banned
Jan 31, 2005
80,011
7
0
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
is.gd
The problem is that pennies DON'T circulate. People just dump them in a jar and leave them there for years. Most of the pennies that have been produced are being hoarded this way--people don't bother trying to roll them or cash them in because it's a lot of work for what winds up being pocket change.

For the matter nickels are being hoarded as well. I have a big jar full of nickels. When I empty out my pocket change at the end of the day, I toss the pennies and nickels in a jar. I keep the dimes and quarters and will pay for small items with them, but the nickels and pennies are too much weight for too little value.
 

shack

Nitpicker Extraordinaire
Oct 2, 2001
51,281
9,917
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Toronto
Next thought. if items are only rounded up or re-prices to 5 cent increments did we just witness 4% inflation?
Something that is priced at $99.98 goes up to $100.
 

nuprin001

Member
Sep 12, 2007
925
1
18
The problem is that pennies DON'T circulate. People just dump them in a jar and leave them there for years. Most of the pennies that have been produced are being hoarded this way--people don't bother trying to roll them or cash them in because it's a lot of work for what winds up being pocket change.

For the matter nickels are being hoarded as well. I have a big jar full of nickels. When I empty out my pocket change at the end of the day, I toss the pennies and nickels in a jar. I keep the dimes and quarters and will pay for small items with them, but the nickels and pennies are too much weight for too little value.
I get that. I'm just saying that the $0.015 cost of producing a $0.01 denomination coin stat doesn't matter, in and of itself.
 
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