ON THE EXTINCTION OF COINAGE Public Deposited

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  • The E-Sylum: Volume 8, Number 53, December 18, 2005, Article 26

    ON THE EXTINCTION OF COINAGE

    Mark Tomasko writes: "I enjoy reading The E-Sylum.
    Interesting stories on the Swiss and Nigerian paper money.
    Thanks for your efforts.

    I was surprised at Pat MacAuley's comments. I do not
    see coinage threatened with extinction in daily commerce.
    While you rarely see a half dollar today, you rarely saw
    them in the past either. That coin hasn't circulated to
    any great extent for the last half century. And I don't
    agree that the "dollar coin is a potential winner." The
    Sacajawea dollar is a coin in search of a purpose, as
    I believe it was produced primarily due to the copper
    producers' lobbying efforts, and those of the vending
    machine industry too. I believe that public opinion polls
    have shown that the American public greatly prefers the
    convenience of paper dollar bills. And the purported
    savings by forcing us all to have a pocket full of heavy
    change (such as was foisted upon the the Canadians and
    Europeans) is probably a small fraction of the cost of
    one jet fighter plane. Fortunately, in the U.S. public
    opinion does count. In terms of numismatics, the state
    quarter program and the changes in the nickels have been
    the most interesting things to happen to coinage in my
    lifetime. For the last 40 to 50 years the circulating
    coinage has effectively been the penny through the quarter.
    It was then and it is now. While use of the penny may
    diminish (I don't see that happening at the current time),
    I suspect the nickel, dime, and quarter will be around
    for a very long time."

Source URL Date published
  • 2005-12-18
Volume
  • 8

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