Canada, like the U.S., has a penny problem. Increasingly, in Canadian stores, either the costs are just rounded up when you get change (if you offer a $2 piece for a $1.87 purchase, you get 10 cents change) or a dish of pennies sits on the counter for you either to take from or add to. As in the U.S., there is agitation to end pennies (which now cost about 2 cents to make). According to a recent New Yorker article (March 31, p. 60), a Canadian credit union group has published a report encouraging the elimination of pennies as well as nickels. Noting that the Americans are having trouble letting go, the report warns that “Canada does not have to follow [the U.S.] example” because the U.S. is a very conservative society, as evidenced by its refusal to adopt the metric system and its insistence on having a one dollar bill.
I’m generally surprised when the Canadians offer what seems to me an unfair criticism of the U.S., because there seem to be so many fair ones. But here I must take issue with the credit unions, although not about the metric system. I have more or less learned to deal with it in the past two decades, but I would note that every grocery stores in Canada that I’ve been in posts all meat and produce prices in metric AND what I think of as real weight measures, suggesting an attachment to the old that the credit union group has not noticed. Granted, the highway signs are all metric except at the border, where they encourage Americans slipping northward to try to keep in mind that 80 kph is the same as 48 mph. This is clearly advice only for the mathematically adept since it doesn’t offer any other equivalencies nor a conversion factor for easy use.
But the dollar bill thing is another matter. It is true that Canada has no paper dollar and, during my time here, it gave up on its two dollar bill. However, the U.S. lost its two dollar bill long ago, and it has been entirely unsuccessful in launching a one dollar coin and has not even contemplated a $2 coin. Canada has both, a fact that is ever present when you pick up your purse. Failing to give up the one dollar bill is not anywhere near as unfortunate a move (conservative or otherwise) as choosing to inflict large and relatively heavy one and two dollar coins on one’s citizens.
In Canada, the little coins (nickel, dime, and quarter) all look pretty much alike in terms of format, although they differ in size, as do the U.S. ones. However, I can never tell whether I have a nickel or a quarter in my hand when I glance at change, unless there is one of each close to each other and thus I can discriminate between their sizes. A nickel has a beaver on it and a quarter has the fabulous Queen E upon it (and there are new quarters that have a wide range of pictures of I do not much know what), but you don’t see the pictures so much as you see the similar style of engraving. This means that when shopping in Canada, I am always handing the clerk a handful of change hoping she can make some sense of it before the people behind me get too restless. It is part of being a permanent tourist and a little old lady.
The tiresome dollar and two dollar coins are something else altogether. The one dollar is kind of gold colored and features a loon. It is called a loonie. My sister was struck speechless once when visiting me in Canada and, out on her own, was accosted by a native who asked her, “Do you have change for a loonie?” The original two dollar coin had a polar bear on it and featured a ring of silver and a ring of gold. Now there are variant pictures for it, as well. Before the two dollar coin came out, there was considerable to-do about what it was to be called. A dubloonie? Or, a toonie? Toonie won out. What can I say?
Canadians may not be conservative but in this case they are just not sensible, is my view. And my wallet bears witness to that. Especially chosen to provide me—as a two country roamer--with four separate pockets for paper bills and two separate pockets for coins, it needs a heavy duty rubber band to keep it closed and a firm grip to keep it from plunging to the ground whenever I pick it up. Filled with way too many loonies and toonies, and way too few Canadian one dollar bills.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
4 comments:
Why do you let the $1 and $2 coins accumulate in your pocket? Why don't you spend them?
The US still produces a $2 bill, although it is seen in circulation less often than other bills.
I like the big denomination coins. Let's see a 5 and a 10.
Nice research. Compare Prices in Canada to US does have a big difference. But they should not let pennies be gone for some reason that they don't have change.
Post a Comment