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View Poll Results: Should They Phase Out The Paper Dollar Bill ?
yes 0 0%
no 6 60.00%
don't care ... 3 30.00%
why are you asking me ?? 1 10.00%
Voters: 10. You may not vote on this poll

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Old 02-15-2007, 04:04 PM   #1 (permalink)
Jolie Rouge
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Should They Phase Out The Paper Dollar Bill ?

Try, try again
Thu Feb 15, 7:48 AM ET



Today, for the third time in less than three decades, the government will roll out an attempt to get the public to embrace a $1 coin.


Good luck.


Despite the potential savings for taxpayers in substituting a durable coin for the often tattered dollar bill, experience suggests it will be a steep uphill fight:

•In 1979, a new silver dollar featuring one of the founders of the women's rights movement, Susan B. Anthony, was issued with great fanfare. The Carter administration called it "the dollar of the future." The public, however, scorned it as too easily mistaken for a quarter.

•In 2000, the Treasury tried again, this time with a distinctive gold-colored dollar depicting Sacagawea, the Shoshone woman who helped guide Lewis and Clark across the West. After a brief burst of excitement, consumers turned indifferent; 110 million coins remain in storage.

The new George Washington dollar coins, available at banks starting today, are the first in a series featuring deceased presidents. They're likely to meet the same fate as the last two efforts unless government does what it has previously been unwilling to do - phase out the dollar bill.

The public no doubt would be annoyed at first. But with vending machines, parking fees and other automated purchases frequently demanding $1 or more, people would quickly come to appreciate the convenience. This is not entirely guesswork. Canada printed its last dollar in 1989; after initial grumbling, Canadians quickly accepted the $1 and even $2 coins.

For the Treasury, meanwhile, the switch would be a money maker. Because coins last longer than bills, government studies suggest savings could exceed $600 million a year. Even in an era of megabillion federal deficits, that's not chump change.

But resistance to change remains strong, fueled by the lobbying of those who get work or government contracts from continued costly production of paper currency.

Until consumers wise up to the hidden tax they're payingfor their infatuation with the greenback, and Congress responds, the shiny new coins featuring Washington and his successors are likely to remain little more than novelties and collectibles.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/usatoday/200...84esvTSEWs0NUE


Has anyone seen the new coins ? Are they still quarter-sized ??

Be kinda dfficult for the "adult entertainer" industry... where can the put their tips ??
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Old 02-15-2007, 04:14 PM   #2 (permalink)
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Re: Should They Phase Out The Paper Dollar Bill ?

I voted NO....I like having the dollar bill but alot of people do need change for a dollar....
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Old 02-15-2007, 04:28 PM   #3 (permalink)
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Re: Should They Phase Out The Paper Dollar Bill ?

I voted no, too. My sis in australia says shes ALWAYS mistaking the "dollar" coins for change. And shes lived there 5 years lol. Of course she also says there are many times she'd find 20 or 30 dollars worth of "change" around the house lol
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Old 02-15-2007, 04:51 PM   #4 (permalink)
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Re: Should They Phase Out The Paper Dollar Bill ?

U.S. Mint rolls out new dollar
By NAHAL TOOSI, Associated Press Writer
Thu Feb 15, 9:44 AM ET


NEW YORK - The newest $1 coin, bearing the likeness of George Washington, was rolled out Thursday, with the U.S. Mint hoping Americans will want to buy George.

Commuters bustled past the unveiling at a Grand Central Terminal event replete with marching music and a George Washington re-enactor. Crowds of collectors and the curious lined up in the station's cavernous, chandelier-adorned Vanderbilt Hall to exchange their paper Georges for metallic ones. "I think it's cool because we get to see a coin with the first president on it," said 7-year-old Jack Garbus, an avid coin collector and second-grader from Valhalla, N.Y., who was taking advantage of a school snow delay to be at the event.

The new coin is going into circulation around the country just in time for next week's celebration of the first president's birthday. "This is quite interesting because currency was not standardized before the Constitution," said the white-pony-tailed re-enactor at Grand Central, who insisted on identifying himself only as George Washington and wore a black 18th-century business suit with long coat, short pants and black stockings.

"George" — or should that be "Mister President"? — wondered aloud whether he should be pictured on money at all, since that was a practice of the king of England.

The Mint is making sure the coins, which are golden in color and slightly larger and thicker than a quarter, will be widely available.

The Federal Reserve, the Mint's distribution agent, has placed orders for 300 million of the Washington coins. Many have already been delivered to commercial banks under orders not to begin circulating them until Thursday.

The design on the coin will change every three months, featuring a new president in the order in which they served. In that way, the Mint hopes to attract a following similar to the more than 125 million collectors who are participating in the 50-state quarter program.

Coin experts, however, questioned whether the rotating designs will be enough to allow the new presidential $1 coin to succeed where the Susan B. Anthony dollar, introduced in 1979, and the Sacagawea dollar, introduced in 2000, failed. "I don't know of any country that has successfully introduced the equivalent of a dollar coin without getting rid of the corresponding paper unit," said Douglas Mudd, author of a new book on the history of money, "All the Money in the World."

Mint Director Edmund C. Moy said Congress made the decision to keep the dollar bill as part of new dollar coin legislation in 2005.

After Washington, the presidents honored this year will be John Adams, Thomas Jefferson and James Madison. The program is scheduled to run into 2016. A president must have been dead at least two years to appear on a coin.

___

AP Economics Writer Martin Crutsinger in Washington contributed to this report.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070215/...4kS.7nO_ys0NUE
___

On the Net:

http://www.usmint.gov
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Old 02-16-2007, 08:11 AM   #5 (permalink)
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Re: Should They Phase Out The Paper Dollar Bill ?

Quote:
Originally Posted by myashley89 View Post
I voted no, too. My sis in australia says shes ALWAYS mistaking the "dollar" coins for change. And shes lived there 5 years lol. Of course she also says there are many times she'd find 20 or 30 dollars worth of "change" around the house lol
I know what you mean to me all their coins look the same at least the bills are different colors lol
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