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460 points andrewl | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.249s | source
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didgetmaster ◴[] No.45902279[source]
Many are reporting this as if failing to mint new pennies each year is going to produce some kind of shortage. There are billions of pennies sitting in drawers or jars in homes across the nation (I certainly have one with about a thousand pennies in it).

I doubt anyone who needs a penny will be unable to find one within the next 100 years.

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c22 ◴[] No.45902365[source]
There's a cash-heavy business I work with that's already having a hard time sourcing the pennies they need. I guess they're all in a jar under your desk.
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didgetmaster ◴[] No.45903313[source]
It seems to me that if there was truly a shortage of pennies, banks could offer to pay 2 cents for every penny someone turned in (still far cheaper than minting a new one) and enough people would pull out their penny jars and cash them in.
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1. allknowingfrog ◴[] No.45904007[source]
That...actually seems economically sound, but it's also a strong argument for the idea that pennies are effectively worthless.