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If rounding on prices, they'll break even. Half the prices get rounded down to the nearest 5 cents, the other half up. Most we're talkin' is 3 cents either way.Yup.
The answer is simple, as I've discussed: Put the under-5-cent amount on the receipt as a voucher. I don't think rounding up is legal in Gnu Yark; and an industry with a couple percents' profit margin can't afford to round down.
The dumb-bass state taxation offices should figure out a way to round out per-item totals with sales tax - but until they do, its scrip time.
Or else, closing time. Another crisis - made by, and beloved of, gubbermint.
It's not unreasonable for sales outlets - and tax collectors - to just round the amounts to the nearest ten cents.In 5 years rounding change for a lack of one cent pieces will not matter. Either inflation will make it worthless or everything will have collapsed and nobody will have money to buy anything anyway.
Ask some of the.old.timers in here from the UK that used to get farthings in change from selling the London Times.
The simple solution would be to move the decimal point over one, with New Dollars. One New Dollar, worth ten old, bad dollars.Might as well get rid of all change, what can you buy for a nickel, dime, quarter, half dollar anyway...
It still have the stupid Obamadesign on the back?Three-Coin Sets Featuring 24-Karat Gold Cent
US Mint
The United States Mint (Mint) is pleased to announce that Stack’s Bowers Galleries will auction the last circulating one-cent (penny) coins this December through a special sale of 232 three-coin sets. Each historic set includes two circulating pennies, one from each of the Mint’s production facilities in Denver and Philadelphia and, for the first time ever, a 99.99% 24-karat gold uncirculated penny, also minted in Philadelphia. The coins will bear a unique Omega (Ω) privy mark, signifying each coin is among the last of the circulating pennies ever struck by the Mint.
Live bidding for these three-coin sets will take place on Thursday, December 11, 2025, at 12 p.m. EST (9 a.m. PST). The auction will be hosted on the Stack’s Bowers Galleries website
No, it'll have an Omega privy mark. The back is the same shield design as current cent coins have. It has nothing to do with the obozo.It still have the stupid Obamadesign on the back?
...then, I'll pass.
One of the first things his people did, after taking over. Make that change.No, it'll have an Omega privy mark. The back is the same shield design as current cent coins have. It has nothing to do with the obozo.
It actually was cowinky-dink that the change happened when it did in obozo's term.And I don't think it's cowinky-dink.
Think of all the money the gov would save going cashless![]()
The change was ordered, then.It actually was cowinky-dink that the change happened when it did in obozo's term.
The Shrub done it.
The change was ordered by Title III of Public Law 109–145, otherwise known as the Presidential $1 Coin Act of 2005
On a side note, that's a series with some seriously low mintage numbers.
....but no one wants them.