The Penny Debate: Do
Pennies Make Sense?
—By Josh Sanburn for TIME FOR KIDS
It costs more to make a penny than the
coin is worth. Should the United States stop using pennies?

Write an essay in which you give your opinion about whether or not pennies should continue to circulate. Use information from the passages in your article.


Manage your time carefully so that you can:


• read the passages;

• plan your response;
• write your response; and
• revise and edit your response.


Be sure to include


• an introduction; with a hook, a two part thesis statement, preview of the essay

a clear statement of your opinion.
• support for your opinion using information from the passages; and cite the text in each of the body paragraphs
• a conclusion that is related to your opinion. Your response should be in the form of a multi-paragraph essay. (5 paragraphs)


    When your grandparents were kids, they could probably buy a handful of candy, a couple of pieces of gum, or a bottle of Coke for just a few pennies.


    Today, you’d need to haul at least a hundred of them to the store to buy just about anything.


    Jarden Zinc Products, a large zinc plant a few miles outside Greenville, Tennessee, has a special claim. Since 1982, it has been the only supplier of penny blanks for the U.S. Mint. The blanks are metal disks that become one cent coins. It’s a good business for Jarden. Since 2000, the company has earned more than $800 million.


However, it may not be a good deal for the U.S.


    The value of the penny has been
dropping for years. In 2006, it began to
cost more than a penny to make a
penny. It now costs 2₵ to produce a 1₵
coin. Many countries have stopped
using pennies. Canada, which has a
currency similar to the U.S., has ended
penny circulation in 2013. In recent

years, Australia, Brazil, and other nations

have eliminated their least valuable coins.

Is it time for the U.S. to do the same?

    Jarden and the zinc industry are fighting to keep the penny. Since 2006, Jarden
has given $1.2 million to Americans for Common Cents (ACC). The group’s mission
is to keep the penny in use. Mark Weller is ACC’s executive director. He argues
that there are three main reasons for keeping the penny. Without it, we would
become more reliant on the nickel, which also has problems. Charities that depend on penny drives would not be able to raise as much money; and 67% of Americans want to keep the penny. The penny is part of our country’s history,
many people say. Others like it because it features Abraham Lincoln, one of the
nation’s most respected presidents.


Many people fear they would end up

paying more for products.


    Many experts disagree with ACC. They point to the dozens of countries that have gotten rid of their lowest value coins without raising prices for consumers.
Charities don’t seem too concerned either. The Salvation Army says the group,
which gets many coin donations isn’t worried. If pennies were to be removed
from circulation, the Salvation Army hopes the American public will continue to
donate generously to help people in need.


    Some business owners say rounding cash purchases to the nearest nickel would
save time for workers and customers. According to the group Citizens to Retire
the U.S. Penny, the average American spends at least 2.4 hours every year
counting and sorting pennies for change—or waiting for others to do so. Many
people find pennies so annoying that they leave them at the cash register for the
next customer.


    The penny is just wasting people’s time, which is a nation’s most valuable
resource. Robert Whaples, an economics professor at Wake Forest University in
North Carolina, says that many pennies fall out of circulation every year because
people just don’t value them. They end up lying around—in piggy banks, between
couch cushions, or on sidewalks. “Because their value is so low, there’s not much
to be lost if you discard or misplace them.”


    The strongest argument for keeping the penny, and that’s the problem with the
nickel. Each nickel cost the U.S. Mint 10₵ to make. If getting rid of the penny led
to greater use of the nickel, wouldn’t that be trading one bad coin for another?
For that reason, some experts have proposed getting rid of the penny and the
nickel. Cash deals would then have to be rounded to the nearest dime.
The U.S. Mint could explore using cheaper metals to make pennies.


    Steel is less expensive than zinc. Pennies are 97.5% zinc and 2.5% copper. But no matter what it is made of,the penny’s days may be numbered. Most in-store purchases are now made with debit or credit cards, not cash. Is it time for a change?