(The Center Square) – State governments are left holding the bag on the U.S. government’s halt to the production of a penny, a new report from the National Conference of State Legislatures says.
Specifically, it’s handling cash transactions.
With each penny consuming 3.7 cents to produce, the U.S. Mint ceased production last month.
The report says, “Notably, the federal government did not issue any regulations around the end of production, continued to treat the penny as legal currency and initially expected that the federal reserve would continue to accept and supply pennies while supplies last.”
Among the questions: Will electronic and cash payments will be handled differently? Electronic payments can continue to be broken down by cents, but that may not be the case for cash payments, requiring rounding.
State revenue and legal risks are in play.
The report says, “The development of guidance to address strategic pricing and encourage clear rounding rules is essential, as is clear communication of new policies to both consumers and businesses.”
Federal reserve terminals have recently been experiencing shortages of pennies and in some cases have stopped supplying them or accepting them, the report said.
“This has required vendors to make spot decisions on how they will handle cash transactions,” according to the report.
States face several issues, from differentiating cashless and cash transactions, rounding, and scarcity of pennies. One concern is that retailers might “engage in strategic pricing that leverages rounding rules to their advantage.”
“As the production of pennies ceased and existing supplies dwindle, both sellers and buyers are facing or will soon face the need to round cash transactions to the nearest five cents, with the nickel assuming the role of the smallest denomination in circulation,” the report states.
The report identifies nine areas that may need to be addressed by state policy or legislation including “rounding clarity,” refunds and consumer protections, effects on state revenue and legal risks.
“Finally, states will need to consider whether federal guidance and/or regulation and legislation is necessary to meet their objectives,” the report says.
Canada stopped distributing pennies in 2012 and its policies might be a model for the U.S., the report states.
“Prices and total payments continued to be calculated in one-cent increments, with rounding applied only at the final stage-after tax had been added,” the report stated on Canada’s policies. “Importantly, tax calculations were based on the pre-tax amount, not the rounded total, preserving accuracy in tax reporting.”