
Why’s it cost so much? Apparently, the penny is made from 2.5% copper and 97.5% zinc and those metals have gone up in price as of late. In fact, if you could melt the coin, you’d have materials totaling 1.62 cents—more than the cent that measly penny is worth. That’s crazy! What’s crazier is that it’s been that way since 2006. Aren’t useful things supposed to be greater than the sum of its parts? Shouldn’t they have changed the metal mixture to something cheaper by now?
Apparently, the director of the Mint tried to make the penny cheaper to manufacture but Congress shut that initiative down. As it currently stands, the Treasury boss can “recommend changes in metal content or in the amount of coins produced” but only Congress can make the final decision.
So maybe it’ll eventually become worth the money to make! Though really, I figured this loss in manufacturing would make for a good reason to kill off the penny (I mean, who likes pennies?). But with old school Congress calling the shots, I doubt that’d ever happen—no matter how useless and expensive pennies become. [Yahoo Finance]



















Tim
Monday, January 17, 2011 at 9:33 AMI’m so glad Australia killed off its copper coins, and yearn for the day when the 5c is withdrawn.
StevoTheDevo
Monday, January 17, 2011 at 10:18 AM5c coins sit in my car ashtray until I have time to feed them all into a parking meter…
I get a feeling of satisfaction that I’m passing on all my shit coins to the city council!
Andrew
Monday, January 17, 2011 at 10:52 AMAround here, parking meters don’t even accept 5c coins. The only way to get rid of them effectively is to take them into the money counting machine at the bank.
Mitch
Monday, January 17, 2011 at 10:20 AMAgreed, 5c coins are the tool of the devil.
Nodeity
Monday, January 17, 2011 at 10:21 AMActually you could probably get rid of the 5c/Nickel coin as well. Hell,.. New Zealand got rid of theirs awhile ago. Hopefully Australia will do the same soon, maybe then it would be worth my while to take my jar of them to the bank and claim the five or six bucks they’re worth.
Sam Cook
Monday, January 17, 2011 at 12:13 PMAgreed small change is annoying (hell, I’m still keen to see a return of the $1 and $2 notes) – but the concept of a currency where part of it is rendered obsolete seems a strange concept to me…
James Mac
Monday, January 17, 2011 at 1:58 PMIf a shop is happy to charge me 99 cents for a product, I’m happy to demand my 1 cent change.
On the penny, a West Wing episode was built around the quest to get rid of it… it’ll never happen because Lincoln is on the face.
Nodeity
Tuesday, January 18, 2011 at 10:04 AMThe price will be rounded up or down to the closest five cents. As for Lincoln being on the coin,.. so what??
Mordd
Tuesday, January 18, 2011 at 7:07 PMPersonally id be happy ditching all coins except $2, $1 and 50 cents, get rid of 20, 10 and 5 cent coins altogether.
I think you’d find most thing rounded up or down to the nearest 50 cents wouldn’t change that much in price, and what can you actually buy for less than 50 cents these days anyway?
Tim
Wednesday, January 19, 2011 at 4:13 PMThey should also shrink the physical size of coins in Australia like they did in New Zealand. Smaller and lighter in your pocket! The 50c coin is currently way heavier than it needs to be.