Banzai, $1 Coins!
Because I only visit the U.S. once or twice a year, I'm always noticing things I might not otherwise. It's a big surprise to me whenever they change the U.S. money, for example redesigning the bills to add anti-counterfeiting features. This time I started receiving those new $1 coins, which feature different presidents printed on them and which have a nice gold color that makes you want to go out and buy a pirate's chest. Although most Americans no doubt like having the $1 unit in paper form, the fact is that governments spend millions to print these bills only to have them wear out in a few years, and it makes sense for the U.S. to follow Europe, Canada and Japan in retiring its lower-denomonation bills in favor of coins. Japan gave up its 100 and 500 yen paper notes long ago, with the main result being that if you have a pocketful of change you can probably buy half a tank of gas, and once you get used to the new money, it's not a nuisance at all. So I say, bring on the $1 (and eventually, $5) coins!




9 Comments:
yes, a very good idea! I use dollar coins all the time in the vending machines at work. they are the older style sacajawea ones.
8:37 PM
Yes, the thing is they need to start the process of not offering dollars anymore. It's inevitible that the "dollar" become a coin, we might as well embrace it in the interests of efficiency.
11:15 PM
I honestly don't think this is going to take off unless they stop issuing the $1 bills. I haven't gotten or seen a $1 coin in over a year and I'm not even interested in collecting them like I am with the state quarters.
1:21 AM
Until you wrote about it, I wasn't even aware of these presidential dollar coins. haven't seen any here in San Francisco.
I disagree on switching to coins. I wish Japan would go the other way, and at least switch that 500 yen coin into a bill. In America, it is easy to go with just carrying bills and leaving the coins at home. Nice and light weight. Can't do that in Japan.
1:51 AM
I also have to disagree on the exchanging paper money for coins point. Coins are heavy, cumbersome to use, difficult to ship in bulk, and a waste of large volumes of precious and semi-precious metals.
While I do agree they LOOK very nice, coins of any and all sorts are largely more trouble than they are worth (sometimes quite literally, IE: cost to produce one coin vs it's face value!)
Ultimately, coins like this are really only useful as specialty items for numismatists.
Of course, Japan's "money culture" is so far behind the times they've only barely started to use checkbooks! I can't imagine what the American "paperless money" society must look like to the unprepared Japanese eye.
I personally carry almost NO cash or coin with me. I use my bank issued credit/debit card for almost every purchase anymore. In many places I don't even have to sign the credit slip. I just wave my card in the air in front of an RFID reader, it beeps, and I get a receipt. Transaction done, and the money is automatically withdrawn from my checking account.
I can't even BEGIN to imagine actually having to carry large amounts of cash or *shudder* COINS in my pockets! Gah! How horrible to have to do that!
No thanks, you can keep your shiny coins, I'll keep my paper and plastic.
4:59 AM
Canada did it many years ago. No more $1 and $2 bills. They looked at me funny when I tried to use my stock of CAD1.00 at the McDonald's drive through going to Toronto in what, 1990 something.
Anyone that wants to can certainly check with the Canadians and see how this might work out for any other country that cares to try it.
How about our friends across the pond? One pound coins, two pound coins, euro coins.
These dollar coins are in general a good idea.
http://www.cbo.gov/doc.cfm?index=5499&type=0
Wasting precious metals? Not a lot of precious metals in our coins any more, and how wasted? You're not going to toss them in the trash are you?
You don't want them in your pocket, do what I do. I use them for tips and hand outs to street people.
7:59 AM
Oooh.. I love the dollar coins. In NYC we get the get the dollar coins from the metro card machines and I actually purchase the first print of the dollar coins in a collectors set as well.. pretty happy about that, but quite OT.
11:13 AM
Yes, they need to gently force them on people. I guess one of the main arguments against would be, the extra fuel cost to transport $100,000 in coins to a bank compared with bills. I doubt if it's equal to the $150 million we'd save (according to what I found online) not printing $1 bills anymore. That's $150 million every year, not bad.
1:09 PM
I don't mean to be a nerd or something. But America has always made dollar coins. Since the beginning of time (or at least America). They come out with a new type every five years ago. Strange they went from silver to gold though.
10:33 PM
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