Stop Making Cents: U.S. Mint Puts an End to a 232-Year-Old Institution

The U.S. Mint stops minting pennies after 232 years, marking an end to a long-standing institution.

In 1984, the new wave band Talking Heads came out with their seminal live album called Stop Making Sense. The U.S. Treasury, meanwhile, at the behest of President Donald Trump, has officially stopped making cents.

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After 232 years, the last U.S. penny was minted on Wednesday in Philadelphia.

Although change has come, that doesn’t mean that every last red cent will suddenly disappear, though:

They’ve been around since 1793. Why stop now? One main reason is that they’re simply not worth the cost, as Trump pointed out in February:

Let's rip the waste out of our great nations budget, even if it's a penny at a time.


READ MORE: DOGE: A Nickel Ain't Worth a Dime Anymore, but Every Penny Costs the Taxpayers Three Cents

A Penny for Your Thoughts? Trump Orders US Treasury to Suspend Production of the Cent


Some stores are already rounding up transactions to the nearest nickel in anticipation of penny shortages. The copper coins (actually, mostly zinc these days) are almost as old as the republic itself:

Pennies were among the first coins introduced by the U.S. Mint, a bureau of the Treasury Department, more than 230 years ago. 

The cost of making both coins has increased over the past two decades. Some of that is attributed to the rise in raw material prices of copper, nickel and zinc.

Higher metal prices result in higher production costs. If production costs get too high, the seigniorage – the difference between a coin’s face value and the cost of putting it into circulation – make the coin worth less than what it costs to make it.

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Back in the day, however, a mere penny might get you a biscuit, some sweets, or even a candle (which would have been an important item indeed in 1793).

They just plain cost a chunk of change to produce, though:

Pennies cost about $56 million per year to make, according to the Treasury Department.

But the penny isn’t even the least cost-effective currency out there – nickels cost around a whopping 14 cents to produce.

Dimes, meanwhile, are a steal at 6 cents, and quarters around 15 cents.

Although some will doubtless be saddened by the end of an American institution, I confess I will not be. I find pennies to be frankly annoying, and the only time you need them is when you don’t happen to have any. They clutter up the coin holder in your car, they pile up somewhere in a corner of your desk drawer, or – if you do carry them around with you – they create an unsightly and heavy look to your pocket. 

Their one main use over the last many years, for me at least, is to bring the pile into the change machine in the grocery store to exchange them for a dollar or two.

That being said, I still have affection for them out of nostalgia, and even if production has now stopped, pennies will remain in our lives for the foreseeable future. Perhaps you will still be able to get a penny for your thoughts, but my guess is that after years of Bidenflation, you should charge a nickel or a dime at least.

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Good luck, penny, and thanks for the memories.

Editor’s Note: After more than 40 days of screwing Americans, a few Dems have finally caved. The Schumer Shutdown was never about principle—just inflicting pain for political points.

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Bob Hoge

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