We actually have a 50¢ coin.  It weighs as much as two quarters and seems a 
little large.  It is not very popular, therefore, not much circulated.  I 
wonder if your criteria should be the number of coins or the weight of the 
coins to make up each amount, or else the bulk of the coins.  I think the bulk 
and weight annoy me more than the number.
 
It is not necessary to drop the fractional part of a unit price (witness 
gasoline/petrol).  Simply round the extended amount to the available currency.  
Overall, both our governments cause perpetual inflation and on average, prices 
creep upward.  Whether or not they use penny elimination to try to hide it will 
not affect whether it occurs.  We have had enough inflation that we could 
eliminate both the penny and the nickle and use decidollars.  If we keep going, 
we could use whole dollars like the Japanese use yen.  We never had a farthing 
to abandon, and our prices creep up (and package size shrink) too.

--- On Mon, 9/10/12, Tom Wade <[email protected]> wrote:


From: Tom Wade <[email protected]>
Subject: [USMA:51889] Re: Minus the Penny, Please
To: "U.S. Metric Association" <[email protected]>
Date: Monday, September 10, 2012, 8:42 AM


[email protected] wrote:
> http://m.good.is/post/chipotle-ends-the-penny-before-u-s-mint-does/?utm_medium=referral&utm_source=pulsenews
> 
We sometimes get the occasional suggestion over here to ditch the 1 cent coin, 
and I  must say I am totally against the idea.  When we dumped the old 
predecimal farthings (1/4 penny) and halfpennies, prices automatically dropped 
the fractional component.  If you are going to display prices in centieuro (or 
centidollars) then you need a coin of value 1 cent, and resorting to rounding 
up or down only makes a very elegant decimal system based on 1/100 slightly 
less simple.  You also open the door to price creep (yes, they may say they 
only round down, but they will end up increasing the displayed price to 
compensate).  Then, what coins will we drop next ?  Will we end up with a small 
range of acceptable values for cents, e.g. multiples of 25, and suddenly find 
we've transitioned from a decimal based to a fraction based (quarter) currency ?

Not all proposed changes are necessarily good.

The real problem with the US coinage is too few rather than too many coin 
types.  You need a 2c and replace the quarter with a 20c and a 50c.  By using 
this  approximate binary multiple (each coin is twice the value of the lower 
one) you increase the number of coin types, but you decrease the average number 
of coins you need to use to make up any given amount.

As an exercise, take all values from 1 and 99 and sum the number of US and Euro 
(*) denominated coins needed to make up each amount. The Euro denominations 
produce a smaller number of required coins for most of them.

Have more coin types, and carry around less as a result.



(*) not just Euro - our former punt had identical denominations, as does the 
current pound.

-- Tom Wade
[email protected]

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