World, Writing, Wealth discussion
Wealth & Economics
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What to do with small change?
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On the other hand, there are numbers out there that show a dollar coin would cost the government less than the paper dollar. While the paper dollar is cheaper to print, the life expectancy of the coin recoups the extra cost given how many times a paper dollar has to be replaced in that same period. Americans tend to complain about how clunky their pockets will feel with all those dollars converted to coins, but I have to say when I visited Canada, I didn't see a problem. If anything, it forced me to spend my change instead of constantly breaking larger bills I didn't need to break.


I brought a few times to supermarket counted and marked small bags. They are usually happy to take a small change and provide banknotes, as they need a constant refill.


We have £1 and £2 coins instead of notes as well as the smaller denominations. The pound note went years ago. The £1 coin is the same size (not far off value) as the 1 Euro coin. Was this convenience, part of the EU attempts to homogenise our societies, or the UK's original plan to join the Euro - take your pick.




I have some friends who tiled their bathroom floor with shiny new pennies, with a clear coat on top. It looks wonderful.

I'm not even sure it's economical to produce coins of small denomination and they are being reduced and taken out of circulation.
But even bigger coins are becoming redundant and useless with their weight and low buying power. You can't really come with a bag of coins anywhere.
Their best usage seems to be as piggy bank fillers and street art encouragement.
Do you think the metal coins are an unnecessary anachronism or not quite?