←back to thread

460 points andrewl | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.201s | 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(20): >>45902306 #>>45903233 #>>45903260 #>>45903385 #>>45903401 #>>45903410 #>>45903530 #>>45903652 #>>45903696 #>>45903720 #>>45903737 #>>45903848 #>>45903857 #>>45904034 #>>45904111 #>>45904341 #>>45904360 #>>45904561 #>>45905087 #>>45906936 #
ahmeneeroe-v2 ◴[] No.45903260[source]
American banknotes have numbers on them to easily distinguish the different values!
replies(6): >>45903324 #>>45903338 #>>45903364 #>>45903390 #>>45903558 #>>45906260 #
Arubis ◴[] No.45903338[source]
Which is great if you are fully abled! But for folks for whom sight isn't as strong, additional aids (different colors, different sized banknotes for different denominations) are super helpful.
replies(2): >>45903781 #>>45905548 #
1. zahlman ◴[] No.45905548[source]
Being fully sighted, I still appreciate it.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Curb_cut_effect