Trump's Treasury Department is saying so long to the penny

signalmankenneth

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I collect wheat pennies?!! I put a penny on the headstone on a grave, a penny on a headstone means you visited the grave and paid your respects.

The Treasury Department will begin phasing out the penny early next year, ending a run for a mainstay piece of American currency first produced by the federal government in the 1790s.

This month, Treasury has made its final order of penny blanks — the material used to make pennies — and its coin producer at the US Mint will continue to manufacture pennies while an inventory of penny blanks exists.

But production will cease after that inventory runs out, a decision first reported by the Wall Street Journal.

The reasons for phasing out the penny are that demand for the lowest-denomination unit of American currency has drastically decreased, and the costs of producing the one-cent piece have eclipsed its worth.

Over the past 10 years, the production cost of a penny has risen from roughly $0.01 to nearly $0.04. Treasury expects savings to accrue as production phases out and it stops using certain facilities.

The US Mint estimates that stopping production of the penny will result in an immediate annual savings of $56 million in material costs.

The move comes after President Trump has pushed to end the production of pennies, issuing a directive in February to Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and arguing that the cost to produce the penny is more expensive than the coin itself.

While Congress sets the rules for currency production and can discontinue or eliminate coins, the Treasury has the power to stop the actual production of new coins.

There has also been a bipartisan push in Congress to end production of the penny. Sen. Mike Lee (R-Utah), along with Sen. Jeff Merkley (D-Ore.), introduced the Make Sense Not Cents Act on May 1 to save taxpayers millions annually by ending production of the US penny.

In April, House Reps. Lisa McClain (R-Mich.) and Robert Garcia (D-Calif.), alongside Sens. Cynthia Lummis (R-Wyo.) and Kirsten Gillibrand (D-N.Y.), introduced the Common Cents Act — bipartisan legislation to end the production of pennies.

Overall, Americans are using cash far less often. Cash remained the third-most-used payment instrument, accounting for 16% of payments in 2023, down two percentage points from 2022, according to the Federal Reserve.

Once production is phased out, there won't be enough pennies circulated for everyday cash transactions. Businesses will need to start rounding up or down to the nearest 5 cents, though non-cash transactions will continue to be priced at exact change.

The penny was one of the first coins made by the US Mint after its establishment in 1792. The design on the first penny was of a woman with flowing hair, symbolizing liberty. The coin was larger and made of pure copper, whereas today's smaller coin is made of copper and zinc.

In 1909, Abraham Lincoln became the first president featured on a US coin, in honor of his 100th birthday. The Lincoln penny is still used today.

https://www.yahoo.com/finance/news/...is-saying-so-long-to-the-penny-165709511.html

A penny for your thoughts?

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I put this penny on this headstone/grave.
 
I collect wheat pennies?!! I put a penny on the headstone on a grave, a penny on a headstone means you visited the grave and paid your respects.

The Treasury Department will begin phasing out the penny early next year, ending a run for a mainstay piece of American currency first produced by the federal government in the 1790s.

This month, Treasury has made its final order of penny blanks — the material used to make pennies — and its coin producer at the US Mint will continue to manufacture pennies while an inventory of penny blanks exists.

But production will cease after that inventory runs out, a decision first reported by the Wall Street Journal.

The reasons for phasing out the penny are that demand for the lowest-denomination unit of American currency has drastically decreased, and the costs of producing the one-cent piece have eclipsed its worth.

Over the past 10 years, the production cost of a penny has risen from roughly $0.01 to nearly $0.04. Treasury expects savings to accrue as production phases out and it stops using certain facilities.

The US Mint estimates that stopping production of the penny will result in an immediate annual savings of $56 million in material costs.

The move comes after President Trump has pushed to end the production of pennies, issuing a directive in February to Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and arguing that the cost to produce the penny is more expensive than the coin itself.

While Congress sets the rules for currency production and can discontinue or eliminate coins, the Treasury has the power to stop the actual production of new coins.

There has also been a bipartisan push in Congress to end production of the penny. Sen. Mike Lee (R-Utah), along with Sen. Jeff Merkley (D-Ore.), introduced the Make Sense Not Cents Act on May 1 to save taxpayers millions annually by ending production of the US penny.

In April, House Reps. Lisa McClain (R-Mich.) and Robert Garcia (D-Calif.), alongside Sens. Cynthia Lummis (R-Wyo.) and Kirsten Gillibrand (D-N.Y.), introduced the Common Cents Act — bipartisan legislation to end the production of pennies.

Overall, Americans are using cash far less often. Cash remained the third-most-used payment instrument, accounting for 16% of payments in 2023, down two percentage points from 2022, according to the Federal Reserve.

Once production is phased out, there won't be enough pennies circulated for everyday cash transactions. Businesses will need to start rounding up or down to the nearest 5 cents, though non-cash transactions will continue to be priced at exact change.

The penny was one of the first coins made by the US Mint after its establishment in 1792. The design on the first penny was of a woman with flowing hair, symbolizing liberty. The coin was larger and made of pure copper, whereas today's smaller coin is made of copper and zinc.

In 1909, Abraham Lincoln became the first president featured on a US coin, in honor of his 100th birthday. The Lincoln penny is still used today.

https://www.yahoo.com/finance/news/...is-saying-so-long-to-the-penny-165709511.html

A penny for your thoughts?

View attachment 51058

I put this penny on this headstone/grave.
It's Trumpflation. Everything will be bumped up to the nickel.
 
Pennies were made out of a different metal than copper during the WWII years. Steel pennies were still relatively common through much of the 1950s.

All I know is that the MAGAt corporate oligarchy will find a way of making the demise of the penny into some sort of economic windfall for them.
They've got too many gullible suckers to let go unexploited.
 
My grandfather left me a number of "large cents", our original one cent coin, first minted in 1793, slightly smaller than a half dollar. After that came the "Flying Eagle" for three years, then the Indian Cent for half a century until the Lincoln cent debuted in 1909. As a kid I had a collection of some of all of them.
 
I collect wheat pennies?!! I put a penny on the headstone on a grave, a penny on a headstone means you visited the grave and paid your respects.

The Treasury Department will begin phasing out the penny early next year, ending a run for a mainstay piece of American currency first produced by the federal government in the 1790s.

This month, Treasury has made its final order of penny blanks — the material used to make pennies — and its coin producer at the US Mint will continue to manufacture pennies while an inventory of penny blanks exists.

But production will cease after that inventory runs out, a decision first reported by the Wall Street Journal.

The reasons for phasing out the penny are that demand for the lowest-denomination unit of American currency has drastically decreased, and the costs of producing the one-cent piece have eclipsed its worth.

Over the past 10 years, the production cost of a penny has risen from roughly $0.01 to nearly $0.04. Treasury expects savings to accrue as production phases out and it stops using certain facilities.

The US Mint estimates that stopping production of the penny will result in an immediate annual savings of $56 million in material costs.

The move comes after President Trump has pushed to end the production of pennies, issuing a directive in February to Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and arguing that the cost to produce the penny is more expensive than the coin itself.

While Congress sets the rules for currency production and can discontinue or eliminate coins, the Treasury has the power to stop the actual production of new coins.

There has also been a bipartisan push in Congress to end production of the penny. Sen. Mike Lee (R-Utah), along with Sen. Jeff Merkley (D-Ore.), introduced the Make Sense Not Cents Act on May 1 to save taxpayers millions annually by ending production of the US penny.

In April, House Reps. Lisa McClain (R-Mich.) and Robert Garcia (D-Calif.), alongside Sens. Cynthia Lummis (R-Wyo.) and Kirsten Gillibrand (D-N.Y.), introduced the Common Cents Act — bipartisan legislation to end the production of pennies.

Overall, Americans are using cash far less often. Cash remained the third-most-used payment instrument, accounting for 16% of payments in 2023, down two percentage points from 2022, according to the Federal Reserve.

Once production is phased out, there won't be enough pennies circulated for everyday cash transactions. Businesses will need to start rounding up or down to the nearest 5 cents, though non-cash transactions will continue to be priced at exact change.

The penny was one of the first coins made by the US Mint after its establishment in 1792. The design on the first penny was of a woman with flowing hair, symbolizing liberty. The coin was larger and made of pure copper, whereas today's smaller coin is made of copper and zinc.

In 1909, Abraham Lincoln became the first president featured on a US coin, in honor of his 100th birthday. The Lincoln penny is still used today.

https://www.yahoo.com/finance/news/...is-saying-so-long-to-the-penny-165709511.html

A penny for your thoughts?

View attachment 51058

I put this penny on this headstone/grave.
Fuck you asshole. You supported the assassination of your president so, fuck you!
 
Pennies were made out of a different metal than copper during the WWII years. Steel pennies were still relatively common through much of the 1950s.

All I know is that the MAGAt corporate oligarchy will find a way of making the demise of the penny into some sort of economic windfall for them.
They've got too many gullible suckers to let go unexploited.
Well as years go by people will save them , as they have in the past and they will become collector items . I have a jug full , many worth 5 to 15 cents now after this they all will go up as will the ones that are worth only a cent now.
As they disappear from circulation they will become worth more and more as collector items.
 
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