What, precisely, makes any of that inevitable? Have you never heard of rounding?Macgyvercas said:No, and I'll tell you why. Because then they'd have to redesign the price system to be multiples of five, since we no longer have one cent pieces. On top of that, sales tax in Pennsylvania is 6%. If the penny were removed, they would have to drop it to 5% or raise it to 10%. Now tell me, which direction do you think seems more likely?
Why exactly would that need to happen? As has been said before money already gets rounded even with the penny. The only difference between this and now is instead of bein charged an extra half penny you get charged an extra two pennies or save two pennies. Even if you do get charged extra, unless you excessively use cash (which in this day and age is most definitely not the norm) you'd be lookin at, at a completely negligible loss and if the opposite is true and they round down it is a completely negligible gain.Macgyvercas said:No, and I'll tell you why. Because then they'd have to redesign the price system to be multiples of five, since we no longer have one cent pieces. On top of that, sales tax in Pennsylvania is 6%. If the penny were removed, they would have to drop it to 5% or raise it to 10%. Now tell me, which direction do you think seems more likely?
I've lived in America my whole life and I thought this was stupid since I was 10. Also, I think they should stop minting new pennies, and round prices up by a penny. (Since almost every non-clearance item that gets sold where I work is *.*9 cents)Yassen said:Edit: Also, while you're at it, include your sales tax on the cost labels. Seriously, when I visited America this practice absolutely baffled me.
Wat?TestECull said:Impossible. Sales tax on a single 4.99 TV dinner is different from an entire cartful of groceries. Sales tax here is applied to the overall total and not the price of any one item, hence you cannot put it on the label. It's also different in every state, with some states not having one at all, so you can't put it directly onto the product package either.
I've never heard anything about that.lacktheknack said:That's not what my bosses told me...Torrasque said:I thought it was a Canadian thread too, lol.Suicidejim said:I thought this was a Canadian thread for a moment, since we're doing that right now. And it makes sense, I don't think anyone actually uses pennies.
For the non-Canadians out there, all that has happened, is that the Canadian mint has stopped making pennies. Pennies are still in circulation, you can still use them to buy stuff, and people still give you them with change, but there will come a day when they are just not around.
I was told that, come September, pennies are invalid. All cash transactions are rounded to five cents, and pennies will be exchanged for nickels/dimes/quarters/etc. at banks for a while afterwards.
Very well done sir, my hat is off to you for that.The7Sins said:On a different topic I once used pennies to troll in an epic move once. I back when I was 14 went into a Walmart and bought a $60 game in only unrolled pennies. Imagine $60 of unrolled pennies and you s the cashier having to count them all. Glorious that day was.
Don't charge $0.99 for something. Stores shouldn't be trying trick us with these stupid price gimmicks to begin with.Lugbzurg said:Something costs $0.99. I hand over a dollar.
"Oh, no! What do!?"
No, not really. You could just round the prices to the nearest hundredth. For example, a product priced at 5.54 would be purchased at 5.50 and a product at 5.56 would be purchased at 5.60. At least, that's what I think they're doing in Canada now that they're phasing out their penny.TheBobmus said:Yeah, but then you'd have to fix whatever crappy VAT laws mean that £99.99 is cheaper than £100. So in all likelihood I don't see it happening, though they are so useless nowadays...