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The Treasury Department has pledged to stop producing the penny by early next year. Here's why — and what becomes of your one-cent coins.
There are thousands and thousands of well-worn financial suggestions — bits of conventional advice that people rattle off ...
The plan, the first large-scale attempt to address the impact of the 1921 atrocity, will raise private funds for housing ...
The singer and humanitarian schooled the podcaster on the real world impact of his billionaire friend's DOGE cuts, while Musk ...
But pencil in the heightened economic uncertainty created by the on-again, off-again tariff negotiations by the Trump ...
Phyllis Resnick, Colorado Futures Center's lead economist, told Newsweek that the loss of the penny will become the "most burdensome on low-income households," pointing to their purchases of ...
After more than 200 years, the U.S. bids adieu to the penny, citing high production costs and shifting economic practices.
Are you team cash or credit? Grand Ledge businesses are seeing up to 70% of transactions go digital, but those fees add up for small merchants. How do you prefer to pay at local shops?
Collier commissioners are considering asking voters to approve a penny hike in the tourist tax to build out the county-owned sports complex.
This move by the U.S. Treasury, motivated by rising production expenses and a call for fiscal frugality, has opened up an ...
The Treasury Department announced this week that it will stop putting pennies into circulation by early 2026, and said that when the coins are eventually in short supply, businesses will need to start ...
Per the latest U.S. Mint report, it costs less than six cents to make a dime ($0.0576). To make a quarter, it costs about 15 cents ($0.1468), and nearly 34 cents for a half-dollar ($0.3397).