This undated file photo provided by the U.S. Mint shows the President John Adams presidential $1 coin.(Photo: AP)
WASHINGTON -- American consumers have shown about as much
appetite for the $1 coin as kids do their spinach. They may not know
what's best for them either. Congressional auditors say doing away with
dollar bills entirely and replacing them with dollar coins could save
taxpayers some $4.4 billion over the next 30 years.
Vending
machine operators have long championed the use of $1 coins because they
don't jam the machines, cutting down on repair costs and lost sales. But
most people don't seem to like carrying them. In the past five years,
the U.S. Mint has produced 2.4 billion Presidential $1 coins. Most are
stored by the Federal Reserve, and production was suspended about a year
ago.
The latest projection from the Government Accountability
Office on the potential savings from switching to dollar coins entirely
comes as lawmakers begin exploring new ways for the government to save
money by changing the money itself.
The Mint is preparing a report for Congress showing how changes in the metal content of coins could save money.
The
last time the government made major metallurgical changes in U.S. coins
was nearly 50 years ago when Congress directed the Mint to remove
silver from dimes and quarters and to reduce its content in half dollar
coins. Now, Congress is looking at new changes in response to rising
prices for copper and nickel.
At a House subcommittee hearing Thursday, the focus was on two approaches:
-Moving to less expensive combinations of metals like steel, aluminum and zinc.
-Gradually taking dollar bills out the economy and replacing them with coins.
The
GAO's Lorelei St. James told the House Financial Services panel it
would take several years for the benefits of switching from paper bills
to dollar coins to catch up with the cost of making the change.
Equipment would have to be bought or overhauled and more coins would
have to be produced upfront to replace bills as they are taken out of
circulation.
But over the years, the savings would begin to
accrue, she said, largely because a $1 coin could stay in circulation
for 30 years while paper bills have to be replaced every four or five
years on average.
"We continue to believe that replacing the note
with a coin is likely to provide a financial benefit to the government,"
said St. James, who added that such a change would work only if the
note was completely eliminated and the public educated about the
benefits of the switch.
Even the $1 coin's most ardent supporters
recognize that they haven't been popular. Philip Diehl, former director
of the Mint, said there was a huge demand for the Sacagawea dollar coin
when production began in 2001, but as time wore on, people stayed with
what they knew best.
"We've never bitten the bullet to remove the
$1 bill as every other Western economy has done," Diehl said. "If you
did, it would have the same success the Canadians have had."
Beverly
Lepine, chief operating officer of the Royal Canadian Mint, said her
country loves its "Loonie," the nickname for the $1 coin that includes
an image of a loon on the back. The switch went over so well that the
country also went to a $2 coin called the "Toonie."
Rep. Bill
Huizenga, R-Mich., affirmed that Canadians have embraced their dollar
coins. "I don't know anyone who would go back to the $1 and $2 bills,"
he said.
That sentiment was not shared by some of his fellow subcommittee members when it comes to the U.S. version.
Rep.
Lacy Clay, D-Mo., said men don't like carrying a bunch of coins around
in their pocket or in their suits. And Rep. Carolyn Maloney, D-N.Y.,
said the $1 coins have proved too hard to distinguish from quarters.
"If the people don't want it and they don't want to use it," she said, "why in the world are we even talking about changing it?"
"It's really a matter of just getting used to it," said Diehl, the former Mint director.
Several lawmakers were more intrigued with the idea of using different metal combinations in producing coins.
Rep.
Steve Stivers, R-Ohio, said a penny costs more than 2 cents to make and
a nickel costs more than 11 cents to make. Moving to multiplated steel
for coins would save the government nearly $200 million a year, he said.
The
Mint's report, which is due in mid-December, will detail the results of
nearly 18 months of work exploring a variety of new metal compositions
and evaluating test coins for attributes as hardness, resistance to
wear, availability of raw materials and costs.
Richard Peterson,
the Mint's acting director, declined to give lawmakers a summary of what
will be in the report, but he said "several promising alternatives"
were found.
Associated Press