Pennies Are Still Useless, And Nickels Cost Eight Cents To Make
It should not cost a government money to literally create its own money, yet it does. A new report from the U.S. Mint says that it costs 1.7 cents to create each penny, and 8 cents to make each nickel. The increase has to do with the cost of metals used in the alloys for coins, especially copper. Simply changing what coins are made of doesn’t solve the problem, since that would alter each coin’s electromagnetic signature. That’s what vending machines use to recognize each coin that customers insert, and changing the signature would require retrofitting every vending machine in the country: understandably, the vending industry is not keen on this idea.
Wait a minute, though–there aren’t any vending machines that accept pennies in the first place. It’s pretty much Coinstar, and the coin-counting machines that banks have for consumers to use that don’t cost as much as Coinstar.
It cost 1.7 cents to make a penny this year, and 8 cents to make a nickel [Washington Post]
2014 Biennial Report to the Congress [U.S. Mint]
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