| ▲ | nixpulvis 3 hours ago | |
I wasn't trying to frame it that way. I have never had to deal with this personally, so that's just how I see it. It's not a big deal, and people have been ignoring it for years with gas. It's just going to be more obvious in some cases now for us in the US. I'll be curious to read the psychology behind how things are priced in response to this. Will $9.99 fade in favor of $9.95 more. All and all, the upsides of stopping wasting resources on pennies outweighs all the minuscule downsides, but it's still curious. | ||
| ▲ | stevage 3 hours ago | parent [-] | |
It would definitely work better with an actual withdrawal from currency. It's weird to have individual businesses having to decide when and how to handle the slow disappearance of coins. But then, there's a lot weird about American currency to me. Like I have heard that repeated attempts to introduce a $1 coin "didn't catch on". In Australia it was pretty simple - they took away all the $1 notes, they made a gazillion $1 coins. It wasn't optional. There wasn't any question of "catching on", it was just...this is what we do now. | ||