←back to thread

349 points andrewl | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.264s | source
Show context
nayuki ◴[] No.45902294[source]
We eliminated pennies in Canada in 2012 and the transition was a non-issue. The vast majority of retailers would round cash transactions to the nearest $0.05, but a few would round down to the nearest $0.05 in favor of the customer. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Withdrawal_of_low-denomination...

Canadian cash is better than American cash in several ways: No penny, durable polymer banknotes (instead of dirty wrinkly cotton paper), colorful banknotes (instead of all green) that are easy to distinguish, $1 and $2 coins in wide circulation (instead of worn-out $1 bills).

replies(19): >>45902306 #>>45903233 #>>45903260 #>>45903385 #>>45903401 #>>45903410 #>>45903530 #>>45903652 #>>45903696 #>>45903720 #>>45903737 #>>45903848 #>>45903857 #>>45904034 #>>45904111 #>>45904341 #>>45904360 #>>45904561 #>>45905087 #
1. kpw94 ◴[] No.45903720[source]
> $1 and $2 coins in wide circulation (instead of worn-out $1 bills).

This has its own pros/cons...

One advantage of $1 bill over coin is the majority of people in US don't need a wallet with zipper to hold coins. Five $1 bills is much less bulky and much lighter than five $1 CAD or five 1€ coins