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The Penny Debate By Brad Andrews

Do pennies still make sense? The country's smallest coin is in big trouble.

The United States has been minting the one-cent piece since 1793. Back then, a penny or two

would buy a meal, a dress, even a place to sleep for a night. Today, a penny doesn't even pay for

a single stick of gum. In recent years, Congress has tried and failed to retire the coin several

times, but the debate continues. Should we keep the penny, or get rid of it? Is the penny a useful

tradition that protects people from rising prices, or a waste of money and resources?

The main argument in favor of eliminating pennies is financial. Pennies are always worth one

cent, but the costs of buying metal, stamping it into coins, and then sending the coins to banks

changes all the time. According to the U.S. Mint, making a penny has cost more than one cent

every year since 2006. In 2012 alone, the Treasury lost $58 million producing and distributing

pennies. Unless manufacturing prices drop, the government will keep losing money on pennies.

Pennies also cost consumers and businesses money. The time it takes to dig the coins from

pockets and cash registers, count them out, and then drag them to banks or coin machines to

exchange for dollar bills is time taken from doing other things. With its buying power at an all

time low, perhaps the penny is simply more hassle than it's worth. It wouldn't be the first U.S.

coin to disappear—the Mint stopped issuing the half-cent piece in 1857 because it wasn't needed

anymore.

In addition, as more and more purchases are made with credit cards instead of with cash, the

need for coins declines. Many pennies don't even circulate, but instead lie ignored on sidewalks,

in dusty corners, or tossed into jars.

On the other side of the debate, there are sentimental reasons to keep the penny. Pennies honor

Abraham Lincoln, one of our most beloved presidents. They are woven deep into our culture,

from childhood memories of penny collections, piggy banks, and wishing wells to the

comforting familiarity of proverbs like "a penny saved is a penny earned."

Those who want to keep the coin also worry that charities running penny drives and spare change

collections will lose money if pennies are phased out.

Penny supporters have some economic arguments as well. They point out that if the penny goes

away, the Treasury will need to make more of the next smallest coin. While it does cost two

cents to make a penny, the nickel is even more expensive, at ten cents apiece. So dropping the

penny may wind up costing the government more in the end. Instead of getting rid of pennies, it

could save more money to just make them out of cheaper and lighter metals.

The biggest disagreement in the penny debate is the issue of rounding. Without pennies, what

happens to prices that end in 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 7, 8, or 9? Those who want to keep the penny worry

that instead of rounding to the nearest nickel, businesses will round up to the next nickel. Prices

would rise, and everything would cost a little more. But the penny's opponents point to studies

that say that the overall effects of rounding are likely to be neutral—just as many prices will be

dropped as raised. They point to many countries, such as Canada, New Zealand, Great Britain,

Australia, Finland, France, and Spain (among others) that have dropped one or more of their

smallest coins without upsetting their economies.

The answer to whether or not we keep the penny is seemingly complex. Recent polls say that a

majority of Americans want to keep the penny. But they also want the government to cut the

federal budget and be more efficient. Without a clear winner, the debate—and the fate of the

penny—is up to Congress.

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