COINSTAR CURRENCY POLL 上市 Deposited

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  • The E-Sylum: Volume 7, Number 27, July 4, 2004, Article 17

    COINSTAR CURRENCY POLL

    To learn how non-numismatists feel about the issue of who
    to honor on U.S. currency, see the Coinstar company's
    annual national currency poll, which was published June 21.
    Abraham Lincoln won the popularity contest (although I
    wonder how that vote breaks down on Northern/Southern
    lines...) A majority of those polled profess no opinion on
    portraits vs. other devices. While a slight majority favors
    adding Reagan's portrait to our money, the numbers drop
    under 50% if adding Reagan means dropping a portrait
    already on our money.

    "The 7th annual Coinstar National Currency Poll, a consumer
    study that provides a look at Americans and their money,
    recently polled Americans on currency design-related topics
    and found that when considering all U.S. currency including
    both bills and coin, Americans named Abraham Lincoln
    (27.9%) as their favorite president currently featured on U.S.
    currency, followed by George Washington (25.2%) and
    John F. Kennedy (5.6%)."

    "Overall, 53.6% of respondents revealed that they have no
    opinion about featuring people versus moments in history or
    other types of images on currency, followed by 36.5% who
    are generally in favor of having people on U.S. currency.
    While 40% of respondents said they prefer presidential figures
    (vs. non-presidential figures), a statistically close 42.7% report
    they have no preference one-way or the other."

    To read the full press release, see: Press Release

    An article referring to the Coinstar poll appeared in the
    Bucks County (Pennsylvania) Courier Times. Based on
    another section of the poll, "More than 60 percent of U.S.
    consumers say electronic payment options such as debit
    and credit cards will replace coins and paper bills in the
    next two decades..."

    "It's a reality we all do face, and it's something that has been
    addressed, especially more recently," said Joyce Harris, a
    spokeswoman for the U.S. Mint. "It's a definite challenge,
    and we're trying very hard now to invigorate people's
    excitement in coins - using them as well as collecting them."

    To keep money relevant to the public, the mint is banking
    on history. There is simply too great a link between coins,
    currency and the country's past for them to suddenly cease
    to exist, according to Harris."

    "Along with a sense of history, mint representatives and coin
    collectors argue, real cash offers a convenience and
    practicality that debit and credit cards simply can't match."
    "Debit cards just aren't needed for those countless tiny
    purchases we make everyday."

    "Along with the practical, coins and currency also have a
    tactile advantage, according to U.S. Mint Public Affairs
    Director Michael White.

    "People still like the tangible aspect of coinage and currency
    - the crisp dollar pulled out of a wallet or the spare change
    clinking in a pocket," White said. "It gives them a sense of
    control."

    To read the full article, see: Full Article

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  • 2004-07-04
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