• Raltoid@lemmy.world
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    2 hours ago

    So is this one of those things where Americans do the common sense thing and agree?

    Or is this the another classic case of a few very loud and emotional Americans screaming with passion and zero logic?

    Or is it one of those situations where everything seems to go smoothly. And then you figure out that they didn’t add the correct rounding regulations, so you’ll be paying a little extra on every single transaction the store puts at .96?

  • wax@feddit.nu
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    7 hours ago

    It’s going to be harder to ask people what they’re thinking 🤔

  • Owl@lemm.ee
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    9 hours ago

    frankly they might aswell cut the 5 cent piece too while theyre at it.

      • empireOfLove2@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        11 hours ago

        The problem is you can’t get rid of nickles without getting rid of either quarters or dimes too. Without nickles you would have a denomination (25c) that has no way to be made by lower coins (10c dimes can’t equal 25c). So you either need to get rid of every coin, every coin except the quarter, or nuke the quarter and nickle concurrently and only use dimes, forcing prices to be multiples of 10.

          • IamSparticles@lemmy.zip
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            10 hours ago

            That isn’t the specific problem. The problem is that you need a way to make up the difference between them. Example: If someone pays $1.00 for something that costs $0.35, how do you make change without a .05 denomination?

            • Pyr@lemmy.ca
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              10 hours ago

              It’s the same issue with the penny, you round up or round down.

              If you have no penny, when taxes on your item make the total equal to $5.03, you pay $5.05. if the total is $5.02 you pay $5.00.

                • rc__buggy@sh.itjust.works
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                  6 hours ago

                  Bring back the bit!

                  The more I think about it, the more I like it:

                  • Eliminate the Penny, Nickel, and Dime
                  • Bring back Old West nomenclature
                  • IT’S AMERICAN AS FUCK!
                  • Will drive the metric nerds absolutely batshit. “Of course we have an eighth* of a dollar, why would we use decimal?!”

                  * I think just the spelling of eighth will spin eurotrash into a tizzy

          • CarbonIceDragon@pawb.social
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            10 hours ago

            Suppose you want to buy something that costs a quarter, and what you have is 3 dimes. If there isnt a 5 cent coin, this creates a situation where you have enough money, but making exact change isnt possible, which while not impossible to deal with is bothersome. If we moved to only dimes and no quarters or nickels, it would never make sense to make a price end in 5 cents, so any price would be a multiple of 10 cents and change can always be made. Alternatively, if you get rid of dimes and nickels but keep quarters, then it doesnt make sense to charge a price ending in something other than .00, .25, .50, or .75, and so you can always make change for those prices with the coins one would have.

            • zkfcfbzr@lemmy.world
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              9 hours ago

              Literally none of this matters anyways if pennies are going, because making prices end in certain amounts won’t work as nice in practice as it does here for the simple reason that US prices almost never include taxes.

              • CarbonIceDragon@pawb.social
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                9 hours ago

                I mean, presumably fractions of a dollar still exist as a concept even if the coins don’t, so if you’re selling something that someone might buy in cash, one could just set the sticker price so that the final price plus tax ends up as a round number, essentially including tax when deciding on price and then taking it out again when making the labels, if one wanted to do that.

        • Yawweee877h444@lemmy.world
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          9 hours ago

          Why’s it a bad idea to get rid of coins at this point anyway. What can you still buy that is a fraction of a dollar that actually matters? Anything that cheap can just be sold in multiples that amount to even dollar amounts.

          Getting rid of coins and rounding to nearest dollar sounds great to me but I don’t know what the drawbacks are.

          • mister_flibble@lemm.ee
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            9 hours ago

            There’s still some edge cases floating around. Some laundromats, parking meters, using a shopping cart at Aldi, older vending machines, bottle deposits, probably a few more but that’s off the top of my head.

        • XeroxCool@lemmy.world
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          7 hours ago

          Chad walks into a committee meeting to explain why we should end the production of our copper familiar. “LOOK AT THIS PENNY GRAPH, every time I do it makes me laugh”

      • N0t_5ure@lemmy.world
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        11 hours ago

        I’ve got a great business idea: I’ll collect a few million dollars worth of nickels and sell them back to the government for 10 cents each. That’s about a 28% discount to the manufacturing cost, and I’ll double my money. Win-win!

  • tomkatt@lemmy.world
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    7 hours ago

    Guarantee Walmart starts pricing things at $xx.96 and milking $0.04 on every transaction.

  • rc__buggy@sh.itjust.works
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    9 hours ago

    Cool. Do the dollar bill next. Go buck and doublebuck coin like Canadia did.

    If I can’t buy a gallon of milk or gasoline with it, it should be a coin.

  • throwawayacc0430@sh.itjust.works
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    7 hours ago

    I heard a rumour that if everyone just gather around politicians and keep throwing pennies at them, the corruption in the government will be gone.

    I mean like… dump an entire box of pennies from a skyscraper onto a politican down below FOR SCIENCE 😏

    • ytorf@lemmy.world
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      11 hours ago

      I saw an interview with an economist years ago where he said that if we just followed the accepted rules of rounding (1-4 rounds to 0, 5-10 rounds to 10) then it would work out about the same. In reality I’m sure companies would just pocket the extra money

      • keys42@literature.cafe
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        11 hours ago

        They already do with sales tax. ( If the tax works out to a fraction of a cent, almost every register or POS system will round up…it’s a tiny amount per transaction, but it does happen and adds up over daily, weekly and monthly transactions)

        • hdsrob@lemmy.world
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          8 hours ago

          I write POS software, and have written tax calculations that cover about 30 states, and several CA provinces.

          While we do have to round (always up) when calculating sales tax, there’s no way for the business to figure out how much that rounding would be, since it’s just added to the tax collected.

          And in all states that I’ve worked with, a business has to pay what they collected (even if they over collect), and can’t just calculate a percentage of total sales (since many states have tax tables, rounding rules, or 3-4 decimal tax rates, and not a flat percentage tax).

          So it’s actually the government that gets the benefit of the rounding.

          • I write POS software

            I don’t know if you’re in any position to suggest decisions, but your software is often run on subpar hardware. Going to touchscreens doubled our call time, it was because of the half second or so of loading between touches. It couldn’t be used naturally because of the delay.

    • JohnnyCanuck@lemmy.ca
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      9 hours ago

      We follow normal rounding rules in Canada. 1, 2 round down to 0. 3, 4 round up to 5. 6, 7 round down to 5. 8, 9 round up to 10.

      Can you game the system? Yes!

      As a business, make sure all your prices (plus tax) come to a price ending in 3, 4, 8, or 9. When consumers buy a single item you’ll get the rounding up (edit: if they pay cash) and make sweet, sweet profit. But if they buy more than one item, you’re SOL on controlling the rounding.

      As a consumer, you have way more control. First, pay with cash whenever the price will round down and you can probably “profit” 5 or so dollars a year. (Assuming you pay with cash on or two times a day, saving 1 to 2 cents each time.) Pay with credit or debit each time the price will would round up.

      Second, you can get real fancy. You can learn tax rules in depth so you know what items will or won’t be taxed and at what rate (we have federal and provincial taxes but they don’t apply to everything and they don’t follow the same rules on what is taxed.) But, you can use this info to always know what the final bill will be and always buy combinations of items that end in 2 or 7 (or 1 and 6 if you’re lazy) and always pay cash. You can profit like $20 a year or something doing this.

      In reality? No one gives a shit until that one rare time you’re paying with cash and it rounds down. It’s your lucky day and you do the Six Flags Man dance. It’s like finding a penny and picking it up.

    • BigDaddySlim@lemmy.world
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      9 hours ago

      There’s still a fuck ton of pennies in circulation and on the ground, unless they consider them no longer legal tender we’ll have plenty.

      However, if we end up following how Brazil does it, in my experience, it depends on the person/vendor and the amount. If you buy something that’s like R$3,99 you’ll usually get give them R$4 and that’s it. I’ve also had it where I’ll pay for something that’s say R$4,89, give them R$5 and get 15 or 25 centavos back. Could also depend on what’s in the drawer at that time.

      Corporations will 100% pocket the difference at first, but once it becomes a normal thing to do the rounding I’ll wager it’ll fall to the Brazilian method, especially with local businesses or vendors.