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Content about Dollar coin

December 3, 2012

WASHINGTON — GAO holds firm in recommending to Congress that U.S. switch to $1 coin

WASHINGTON — The U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO) stands by its position that replacing the $1 bill with a $1 coin would provide hundreds of millions of dollars in benefits to the government annually.

Lorelei St. James, the GAO’s director for physical infrastructure issues, testified last week before the House Financial Services Subcommittee on Domestic Monetary Policy and summarized the GAO’s latest findings on benefits of making the switch.

Since coins are more durable than notes and don’t need to be replaced as often, many countries have replaced lower-denomination notes with coins to obtain a financial benefit, among other reasons.

The overall net benefit would be due solely to increased seigniorage—the difference between the cost of producing coins or notes and their face value—and not to reduced production costs.

GAO’s estimate takes into account processing and production changes that occurred in 2011, including the Federal Reserve’s use of new equipment to determine the quality and authenticity of notes, which has increased the expected life of a note (the $1 note is expected to last 4.7 years and the $1 coin 30 years).

The GAO acknowledges there would be shorter- and longer-term costs that would result from the replacement.

Shorter-term costs would be those involved in adapting to the transition, such as modifying vending machines, cash-register drawers, and night-depository equipment to accept $1 coins. Such costs would also include the need to buy or adapt coin-counting and coin-wrapping machines.

Longer-term costs may include transportation and storage costs for the heavier, more voluminous coins, and processing costs.

While the GAO recommends making the change—it has reported the benefits on six different occasions over the past 22 years—results from national surveys suggest that public opposition to eliminating the $1 note persists.

November 30, 2011

WASHINGTON — New independent poll results from Luntz Global confirm Americans’ overwhelming preference for the dollar bill over the dollar coin, their disapproval of legislation seeking to abandon the greenback, and urging for Congress to focus on finding real solutions to the country’s debt problems.

The poll reported 83% of Americans favored keeping the dollar bill over the dollar coin (800 Americans nationwide were surveyed), according to a press release from the ad hoc group Americans for George. Convenience and national pride were among the reasons people preferred the dollar bill, with 97% of respondents saying the bill was more convenient for them to use than a coin.

The survey also found that a majority of Americans, 64%, do not support legislation, such as the Currency Optimization, Innovation and National Savings (COINS) Act, to switch from the dollar bill to the dollar coin and view it as an impractical proposal to cut government spending.

In a report issued earlier this year, the Government Accountability Office (GAO) estimated that replacing the dollar bill with the dollar coin would provide a net benefit to the government of approximately $5.5 billion over 30 years.

November 5, 2010

CHICAGO — If given the choice, would you replace the dollar bill with a dollar coin? How would this move affect your laundry, now and in the future? While this switch may be inconvenient for a number of reasons, would you support it if you discovered it could save this country a sizeable amount of money on a yearly basis?

When it comes to “firing up” laundry owners, few subjects can match the dollar coin for the amount of passion it invokes.

STRIVING FOR ACCEPTANCE

November 12, 2008