Here is an interesting dilemma for the United States…the money in your pocket is actually worth more if you destroy the money…my mind hasn’t quite wrestled this to any sort of conclusion yet, but it seems to me that this is probably an indicator of a pretty severe currency crisis….consider…it costs more to make money than our money is worth….this is more than just rising metal prices…maybe you guys can clue me in on what this REALLY means…
cd
WASHINGTON – Given rising metal prices, the pennies and nickels in your pocket are worth more melted down than their face value — and that has the government worried.
U.S. Mint officials said Wednesday they were putting into place rules prohibiting the melting down of 1-cent and 5-cent coins. The rules also limit the number of coins that can be shipped out of the country.
“We are taking this action because the nation needs its coinage for commerce. We don’t want to see our pennies and nickels melted down so a few individuals can take advantage of the American taxpayer,” Mint Director Edmund Moy said in a statement.
Officials said they had received a number of inquiries from the public in recent months concerning the value of the metal in the coins and whether it was legal to melt them.
The new regulations prohibit the melting of 1-cent and 5-cent coins, with a penalty of up to five years in prison and a fine of up to $10,000 for people convicted of violating the rule.
The rules also require that shipments of the coins out of the country be for legitimate coinage and numismatic purposes and cap the size of any one shipment to $100 worth of the coins.
Because of the prevailing prices of copper, zinc and nickel, the cost of producing pennies and nickels exceeds the face value of the coins.
A nickel is 25 percent nickel and 75 percent copper. The metal in one coin costs 6.99 cents for each 5-cent coin. When the Mint’s cost of producing the coins is added, the total cost for each nickel is 8.34 cents.
Modern pennies have 2.5 percent copper content with zinc making up the rest of the coin. The current copper and zinc in a penny are worth 1.12 cents. The cost of production drives the cost of each penny up to 1.73 cents.
Pennies made before 1982, which are still in circulation, would be even more lucrative to melt down because they contain 95 percent copper and only 5 percent zinc. The metal value in those coins is 2.13 cents per coin, Mint officials said.
The new regulations are being published in the Federal Register and will go into effect as interim rules which will not become final until the government has a chance to consider possible modifications based on public comments.
This means I need to get a blow torch!
Does the US Mint have any tips that we should NOT EVER use to separate the different metals contained in coins?
Napoleon once called England a nation of shopkeepers. It was supposed to be an insult. After all, how important can a country of “boutiquiers” be?
My question is have any other countries had this happen to their coinage before? To have the smallest denomination be worth more intrinsically than its face value?
At this pace, the United States is destined to become a nation of manhole cover thieves.