Posted on 03/31/2017 8:19:18 PM PDT by Tolerance Sucks Rocks
Advocates of abolishing the $1 Federal Reserve note are at it again, this time hoping that President Donald Trump and conservative Republicans will finally side with their three-pronged approach to revamping the nations currency system.
Under S. 759, introduced March 29 by Sens. John McCain, R-Ariz., and Mike Enzi, R-Wyo., the government would end production of the $1 Federal Reserve note, revise the composition of the 5-cent coin, and suspend production of 1-cent coins.
While the draft legislation calls for an end to paper dollar notes and the cent, it is silent on dollar coin production.
Backers of the legislation said they believe that the existing stocks of circulation-quality dollar coins stored in Federal Reserve Banks around the nation will be more than adequate to meet demand.
They also cite the success of Canada and other nations as proof that the public will accept the dollar coins once the paper dollar is eliminated.
S. 759 was referred to the Senate Committee on Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs.
Groups have pushed the end of the paper dollar for decades, but every time they have been quashed by a coalition of printing unions and the Crane & Co., a Massachusetts firm that has had a lock on supplying the specially blended paper used in printing Federal Reserve notes. Crane has supplied the paper for U.S. paper currency continually since 1878. Its cotton-based paper is the most durable banknote paper in the world, achieving the longest life span of any paper currency, the firms website states.
Although Crane has long opposed elimination of the $1 note, when the Dollar Coin Alliance, the organization leading the proposed changes, launched its new effort on March 29, it issued only a brief reference through former Rep. Jim Kolbe, R-Ariz., to special interests in the paper industry and to sheer inertia on Capitol Hill for killing his repeated efforts to end the paper dollar.
Without that change, Kolbe said, there is no question that a dollar coin cannot succeed.
Kolbe and another former congressman, Tim Penny, D-Minn., are co-chairmen of the Dollar Coin Alliance.
What has given the Dollar Coin Alliance hope, said the groups executive director Shawn Smeallie, is that the new president and lawmakers will support and act upon the premise that abolishing the paper dollar can produce $16 billion in savings.
The administration, I think, is a little more receptive to this argument, he told Coin World.
Can you imagine Donald Trump seeing that pennies cost more than they are worth? said Smeallie, a former aide to President George W. Bush.
Why are we doing this? Smeallie said Trump would ask.
Smeallie said he also believes that the new Congress is filled with conservatives who want to devise ways for the federal government to cut its costs.
The use of coins instead of paper dollars will yield big savings, his group argued at their Capital Hill press briefing.
One new point they will raise is a Hart Research Associates and Public Opinion Strategies online poll of 1,001 registered voters.
That poll showed voters favored replacing the $1 bill with a $1 coin when informed of the estimated savings for the government and taxpayers.
When told the savings over 30 years could be $4.4 billion, fully 70% of voters say they favor replacing the $1 bill, ... a release from Hart Research said.
Only 30 percent oppose it, the release said.
Currency reform legislation
The Dollar Coin Alliance distributed fact sheets on S. 759 and said similar legislation will soon be introduced in the House.
The Senate bill is expected to call for suspending production of 1-cent coins, saying that a sufficient number of cents are stored in jars.
Taxpayers would saved the production costs, but the U.S. Mint would be authorized to meet demands of numismatic collectors wanting cents.
In addition, the comptroller general would be directed by the legislation to study the impact of the suspension of cent production.
For 5-cent coins, the Mint would be directed to study a copper-nickel composition equal to 80 percent copper and 20 percent nickel. The current alloy is a homogenous mix of 75 percent copper and 25 percent nickel.
The new composition could remain in effect as long as it cuts costs to taxpayers, can be accepted by coin machines and has no impact on public or stakeholders.
The bill would also allow the Mint director to submit plans to increase the percentage of copper and decrease the amount of nickel in the coin after presenting the plan to Congress.
The bill would not allow the Federal Reserve to issue any more $1 Federal Reserve notes two years after the law is enacted. However, it would allow some $1 bills to be made and sold as collectibles.
The Dollar Coin Alliance describes itself as composed of small businesses, mass transit agencies, watchdogs, trade associations and private companies.
When asked who the companies are, Smeallie told Coin World, They are copper related.
Among the members of the alliance are the Arizona Mining Association, Copper and Brass Fabricators Council, and Copper Development Association.
The ties between copper interests and the dollar coin movement are noted in stories about Kolbes efforts to seek an end to the paper dollar in the 1990s.
And that is the point that everyone is missing. Who cares if it's paper or metal? The point is that it only has value as long as people value it. In other words, as long as they have faith in its value.
Very soon, that faith will erode, either through debt repudiation or inflation, which is another form of repudiation. At that point it doesn't matter what form the currency takes. It is all fiat money and, in the end, worthless.
Either get rid of the dollar bill or get rid of the dollar coin. Makes no sense to have both.
Yes, eliminate the penny - it costs more to produce than it is worth. Once it is gone, merchants will adjust - manually or with their “check out machines” software - to round or truncate amounts to the nearest nickle (round up if it’s 3 or 4 cents, truncate down if it’s 1 or 2 cents).
As to the paper dollar, I would see what cost savings there would be by melting down and eliminating the dollar coins - I hate them. I’d much rather carry a few dollar bills than any dollar coins. We’ve even, thankfully, had some train ticket machines converted from dispensing dollar coins in change to dispensing dollar bills.
So do about half the U.S. population.
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You are not allowed to eliminate the penny when I am charged 7.25% sales tax.
Flat 5% or 10%, then we can discuss eliminating pennies.
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Gee, I wonder which way govt would go? /s
>Strippers and exotic dancers hardest hit.
That is not the ‘$.01 slots’ they’re talking about...
Plus, I want to know where YOU go...to avoid the place(s) /s
How about a $2.56 note. Then we can be amused watching the clueless morons in stores try to make change. Call it the Snowflake bill. Decorate it with clowns, Che T-shirts, gang-bangers holding glocks sideways, aiming at mooslim females with rainbow-colored vaginas on their heads. It would be the most politically correct currency in the world.
This is merely an incremental move on the path to abolish currency, thus further enslaving citizens to the Federal Reserve - which is neither federal nor a reserve. Once the dollar is gone, it will force more and more people to start using debit cards and credit cards, which they will then use as an excuse to eliminate $5 and $10 bills, then twenties and it’s over. USAID pushed India to do this to see how it will work here.
Silver quarters could be reintroduced as silver $5 pieces. How’s that for inflation!
YES! The dollar coin WILL BE accepted once the bills are gone.
Bring back the $2 bill.
All sales rounded up or down to the nearest nickel.
Math calculations and digital transactions not affected by elimination of the penny. Only CASH transactions affected by the Penney.
I currently THROW AWAY pennies. They are USELESS and take up valuable space in cash drawers that should be used for dollar coins.
I’ll bet the total amount of time and money WASTED on pennies is YUGE!!!!!
BAN PENNIES AND THE ONE DOLLAR BILL.....NOW!
Ban pennies and the people who have been hoarding pre-1982 copper pennies will melt them down to sell as scrap copper; the real copper penny is currently worth about 3 cents. Also, this destruction of nearly all copper pennies will make my Lincoln cent collection much more valuable.
You could also go straight to a two-dollar coin, like Canada did some years ago.
Canada rounds your change up or down to the nearest 5 cents. The last time I went there in 2015, I wanted to exchange some Canadian small change for Canadian quarters, and the small change included pennies. The person seemed surprised, apparently about the pennies, but went ahead and included the pennies in the exchange.
I don’t think India worked very well. They scrapped their old 500-, 1000- and 2000- rupee notes, supposedly to prevent their use in black market activity, but shortly created new 500- and 2000-rupee notes.
Or a $2.55 note, to represent all the combinations of 0’s and 1’s you could have in an 8-bit computer byte.
As long as they put $500 and $1000 dollar bills back into general circulation, that’s always a plausible option.
Quite possible. Our mission is to oppose such a thing, of course, by using cash wherever possible.
I’m sure they can switch out or adjust the coin receptacles in the old machines.
We could always replace Sacajawea and the other personalities on the dollar coin with George Washington.
True. Scrip and slugs supported only by our faith in the system. If our faith collapses, they will be mere trinkets while we exchange TP for food.
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