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General Circulation Trends (Us Vs Uk)

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Pillar of the Community
United States
4897 Posts
 Posted 07/01/2012  6:32 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add amida17 to your friends list
could not be said any better.
Pillar of the Community
United States
1796 Posts
 Posted 07/01/2012  7:38 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add SteveCaruso to your friends list
Only thing I'd say is that notes aren't more convenient, they're simply what more people are *used to* and when given a choice people will generally go with what is familiar unless persuaded otherwise. Case in point, 3 out of 4 Americans will prefer notes to coins if they *do not* know about how much money they'll save the government to produce and that they're recyclable. That ratio changes to 2:1 *in favor* of coins when those facts are mentioned. People are willing to try something new if it's worth it, and the Mint has really fumbled on the education front.
Edited by SteveCaruso
07/01/2012 7:39 pm
Pillar of the Community
United Kingdom
2624 Posts
 Posted 07/01/2012  7:38 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add DavidUK to your friends list
Nice reply, I was unaware of the politics of the situation... Is it fair to say that the $1 coins are a bit of a rarity and not used much more than they were in the past and it doesn't look set to change?
Pillar of the Community
United States
1796 Posts
 Posted 07/01/2012  7:42 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add SteveCaruso to your friends list
Their use right now is more of a regional thing. Some areas they circulate widely (in central New Jersey they're all over the place), other areas they're still relatively rare to find in change (even as close as southern New Jersey). Their mileage really varries.
Bedrock of the Community
United States
20753 Posts
 Posted 07/02/2012  09:37 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add just carl to your friends list
Not sure about other places but by me no one uses the baby sized dollar coins. I've never seen one used anywhere. At banks tellers ask if you want some since they have so many to get rid of and no one takes them. Biggest complaint I hear is to close to a quarter and just don't like to carry extra weight. As to the circulation of old coins, they still appear in change all the time due to many reasons. Many are popping up due to robberies of homes and stores and the criminals just spend what they steal as money, not a numismatic item. Also, occationally some put some in change just for fun. I know when I take coins to a bank I always throw in a Wheat cent just for fun thinking how it will make someone say WOW, look what I found.
Regardless of what other countries do, in the USA we just don't like anyone telling us what to do with anything. Note how we hang on to our non Metric system.

Quote:
America has been trying to introduce a "small-sized" circulating $1 coin since the 1970s. Every time they've tried, they've failed, because the American politicians insist on "giving people the choice" between using $1 coins and $1 notes. And if you give people such a choice, they will always choose notes, because notes are more convenient.

AND this is just one of those where we like to do what we want. I suspect that our politicians think they will be voted out if they attempted to take away our paper money.
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189117 Posts
 Posted 07/02/2012  11:02 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add jbuck to your friends list

Quote:
Only thing I'd say is that notes aren't more convenient, they're simply what more people are *used to* and when given a choice people will generally go with what is familiar unless persuaded otherwise...
I agree.

I seldom, if ever, see them around here. The one place that consistently had them was the post office, but I lost that source when they converted all of their machines to electronic payment. For these reasons I have quit collecting them from circulation (I only collect the proof issues).
Pillar of the Community
United States
1064 Posts
 Posted 07/02/2012  12:04 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add JackB to your friends list
I definitely fall on the convenience side; just checking right now, I have eight one-dollar bills folded neatly in my pocket. I would not care to have 8 coins to carry around, plus my summer shorts tend to hang low when I have too much pocket change! Also, I find I don't really use much 'money' these days, mostly credit & debit cards.
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 Posted 07/02/2012  12:55 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add jbuck to your friends list

Quote:
I have eight one-dollar bills folded neatly in my pocket.
You should have a five and three ones.
Pillar of the Community
United States
1064 Posts
 Posted 07/02/2012  1:33 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add JackB to your friends list

Quote:
You should have a five and three ones

Absolutely right jbuck, but keep fives and above in my wallet; one of many quirks I have. Now, where did I get so many ones, since I almost never use 'money'?
Pillar of the Community
United States
2605 Posts
 Posted 07/02/2012  2:01 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add svslav to your friends list

Quote:
I seldom, if ever, see them around here. The one place that consistently had them was the post office, but I lost that source when they converted all of their machines to electronic payment. For these reasons I have quit collecting them from circulation

I'm lucky enough to work in a building with a wall of vending machines. Right in the middle there's one that converts your bills into dollar coin (as not all machines accept bills). Every once in a while I put a 20 in it and scan for new coins.
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 Posted 07/02/2012  4:13 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add jbuck to your friends list

Quote:
Now, where did I get so many ones, since I almost never use 'money'?
I wonder...

Truth is, we all do it. We get in a hurry and forget to use exact change when we have it.

I feel it will be easier to remember when the weight of the dollar coins are in our pockets. Now, if I have coins in my pocket, I always see if I can use them instead of using an extra note. I suspect having dollar coins "weighing me down" will make me even more aware.


Quote:
I'm lucky enough to work in a building with a wall of vending machines. Right in the middle there's one that converts your bills into dollar coin (as not all machines accept bills). Every once in a while I put a 20 in it and scan for new coins.
The car washes around here take dollar coins, but the bill changer dispenses quarters. It is a good thing for quarter searching, not so much for dollar coins.
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Finland
294 Posts
 Posted 07/02/2012  4:21 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Eurocoin to your friends list
Ok, this is USD vs. GBP but I find the use of 2 euro coins quite a convenient. It's not much larger than one euro coin, but when you have five of them in wallet it weighs nothing but have quite a good purchasing power in kiosks, coffee shops, market places, parking meters etc.
Bedrock of the Community
United States
20753 Posts
 Posted 07/02/2012  4:24 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add just carl to your friends list

Quote:
You should have a five and three ones.

However, this is a good reason to have our government to start making more different denominations of bills. For example here an $8 bill would be great. So why not a $3, $4, $6 and all the way up to $1,000? I'd really like to see someone at McDonalds trying to change a $47 bill.
A long time ago I used to get so many holes in pockets from change that I attempt to never carry coins. And with all the money back systems for credit cards, I try to only use them.
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 Posted 07/02/2012  4:40 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add jbuck to your friends list

Quote:
Ok, this is USD vs. GBP but I find the use of 2 euro coins quite a convenient.
I am not opposed to the eventual conversion of our two dollar note to a two dollar coin. It works in Canada.
Bedrock of the Community
United States
17884 Posts
 Posted 07/03/2012  12:33 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Conder101 to your friends list

Quote:
Is it fair to say that the $1 coins are a bit of a rarity and not used much more than they were in the past and it doesn't look set to change?

Yes they are a rarity in circulation, and no it doesn't look like a real change is coming anytime soon. In fact since they have so many of the dollar coins in storage because they don't circulate they have stopped making them for circulation now. If they had stopped the dollar note instead the government would have saved a bundle on the cost of printing them, the coins would have moved from storage into circulation, and coinage of the dollars would have continued which would have prevented the mint from operating at a loss this year.
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