One of the things I found odd when I emigrated to Aus, was the pricing of goods. Shops could have stuff marked up as $4.98, but there were no 1c or 2c coins so prices were rounded up or down to the nearest 5c.
Now they are doing away with the 5c coin too!
Shops keen to shelve coin
The Sun-Herald reported exclusively last week that the Royal Australian Mint had issued a confidential warning to the federal government that the cost of making the coin had now exceeded its face value. The Assistant Treasurer, Bill Shorten, confirmed he was in the early stages of making a decision about the coin's future.
The Australian Retailers Association executive director, Russell Zimmerman, said the coins were a "nuisance" to handle and he would support moves to remove it from circulation.
However, there was concern that the change would complicate pricing policies, he said, and retailers would need some direction on whether they should round prices up or down. He was also worried that smaller retailers would feel the change the most.
The consumer group, Choice, is in favour of phasing out the five-cent piece but urged strong guidelines on whether prices go up or down.
''Consumers might regard the decision to round up, a cost they shouldn't have to bear,'' said the National Retail Association's executive director, Gary Black.
Parking and vending machines and phone booths have already stopped accepting the tender and many other everyday services are moving rapidly away from cash transactions, especially small-coin denominations.
"With the rising prices of metals and some of the ingredients which go into the five-cent coin, [the Mint] certainly reported that it's more expensive to make the five-cent coin than five cents," Mr Shorten said.
But he was also concerned about donations to charities, which are often the beneficiaries of smaller currency.
“If you trust in yourself, and believe in your dreams, and follow your star. . . you'll still get beaten by people who spent their time working hard and learning things and weren't so lazy.”
Without the 1c and 2c coins rounding is easy. If it says $1.97 it costs $1.95 in cash and if it says $1.98 it costs $2 in cash.
So what happens to things with a price tag of $1.95 if they get rid of the 5c coin? It can only be rounded down to avoid riots in the streets.
I noticed once the price of mars bars in an IGA. The regular was $1.98 and the king-size $2.02.
Makes sense...
Why is it that when Miley Cyrus gets naked and licks a hammer it's 'art' and 'edgy' but when I do it I'm 'drunk' and 'banned from the hardware store'?
Jarlaxle wrote:The US needs to step into 1995 and eliminate the penny and the $1 bill. Maybe the nickel, too.
06:50 pm
June 24, 2011
John W. Poole/NPR
On today's Planet Money, we visit an underground vault that's full of money nobody wants.
The money — bags and bags of dollar coins — is the result of a 2005 law that requires the U.S. Mint to print a series of coins bearing the likeness of each U.S. president.
The problem is, people don't really like dollar coins. And there aren't enough people who are fired up about, say, Rutherford B. Hayes, to make much of a difference.
So more than 1 billion dollar coins are now sitting, unwanted, in Federal Reserve vaults around the country. By the time the program wraps up in 2016, the Fed will be sitting on 2 billion unwanted coins, according to the Fed's own estimates.
The total cost to manufacture those unwanted coins: $600 million.
For more, see the Fed's 2010 report to Congress on the program, and the letter the Fed wrote back in 2005 warning about potential problems with the program.
Your collective inability to acknowledge this obvious truth makes you all look like fools.