Coin shortage
Posted: Wed Aug 04, 2021 4:32 am
I've read about the shortage of coins but as I almost never use cash (Discover Card, pay it off every month) I really had not seen it.
My elderly neighbor sometimes asks me to get her something online and she gives me dollars. So when I was in Walgreen's yesterday for a $6.99 plus $0.42 tax purchase, I handed over a $10 bill. Cashier (or whatever they call them these days - transaction engineer?) gave me three $1 bills.
I was staring at these not quite sure what to say - she had closed the drawer and obviously my purchase was at an end - and the $3 was clearly not going to be accompanied by $0.59 in coins, at which point I would have said something like 'You've given me a dollar too much" and returned said dollar while basking in my self-righteousness.
She looked at my puzzlement and said, shrugging her shoulders, "No coins" and passed on to the next customer.
So by using cash I got a 8% or thereabouts discount. My Discover card gives me a 1% rebate if it feels like it - I am never entirely clear on the rules - there's a savings opportunity here. Is this common? As I say, I very rarely use cash and maybe this happens all the time.
I remember my stint in retail when I was a student. (I had a steady job at a wine store for three years. UK drinking age was 18. Good times. If we'd had a good week the manager would, on Saturday afternoon, open a bottle of good Champagne or - my favorite - Chateauneuf-du-Pape, so that he could educate us cellar boys about wine. Great times.). The cash had to match the register records to the penny. Times have changed.
My elderly neighbor sometimes asks me to get her something online and she gives me dollars. So when I was in Walgreen's yesterday for a $6.99 plus $0.42 tax purchase, I handed over a $10 bill. Cashier (or whatever they call them these days - transaction engineer?) gave me three $1 bills.
I was staring at these not quite sure what to say - she had closed the drawer and obviously my purchase was at an end - and the $3 was clearly not going to be accompanied by $0.59 in coins, at which point I would have said something like 'You've given me a dollar too much" and returned said dollar while basking in my self-righteousness.
She looked at my puzzlement and said, shrugging her shoulders, "No coins" and passed on to the next customer.
So by using cash I got a 8% or thereabouts discount. My Discover card gives me a 1% rebate if it feels like it - I am never entirely clear on the rules - there's a savings opportunity here. Is this common? As I say, I very rarely use cash and maybe this happens all the time.
I remember my stint in retail when I was a student. (I had a steady job at a wine store for three years. UK drinking age was 18. Good times. If we'd had a good week the manager would, on Saturday afternoon, open a bottle of good Champagne or - my favorite - Chateauneuf-du-Pape, so that he could educate us cellar boys about wine. Great times.). The cash had to match the register records to the penny. Times have changed.