Actually there have been studies which indicate that non conventional pricing gets the best results. For example a label of $2.97 would attract more buyers than a label of $2.95 or $2.99.Next time they do, suggest that those stores that use 99 cent pricing (e.g. $2.99) as a way to make folks think, at the subconscious level, they are paying a dollar less than they are will now likely be using 95 cent pricing (e.g. $2.95) and thus they will be saving 4 cents on the item.
What does this mean?Meanwhile millions of dollars in loonies and toonies are being scooped up in Ontario.
heh heh, it means a brinks truck got smoked by a semi-trailer, spilling a very large volume of loonies and toonies all over the roadWhat does this mean?
Holy shit...that's funny...thanks!heh heh, it means a brinks truck got smoked by a semi-trailer, spilling a very large volume of loonies and toonies all over the road![]()
Why would $2.97 or $2.99 disappear?But with the penny gone, the options of $2.97 & $2.99 disappears. Now, faced with the pricing options of $2.90, $2.95 & $3.00, which are the more appealing to consumers & which are retailers likely to choose?
You have the concept wrong, this is why lots of people figure it means their grocery bills will be hundreds of dollar more each year.How would I pay for just one of such an item when pennies are no longer legal tender?
Pennies are still legal tender and they will continue to be until the Royal Canadian Mint rounds up the billions of them that are in circulation....and by circulation I mean the ones that are in rolls in bank vaults to the ones that are in the tills of business establishments and for the most part the pennies that are in large containers such as plant pots/texas mickey's that the average person puts them in everyday when they get home and empty their pockets of change....until ALL of those pennies have been collected to a singular source and melted down into copper bricks the penny will still be a part of the Canadian monetary system and will be legal tender.What happened today was that Government of Canada declared that the penny would no longer be produced by the Royal Canadian Mint as it cost 1.6 pennies to make a penny and at the same time introduced the rounding up/down policy....this of course will most likely cause the desired effect of people getting rid of their pennies accumulated in large containers and thusly speed up the process.How would I pay for just one of such an item when pennies are no longer legal tender?
I can see this happening eventually and when it does I will be in a quandry....like most guys I keep a "change bucket" where I deposit my change when I get home at the end of the day...twoonies/loonies/quarters....EVERYTHING....and when that cantainer gets filled up I cash it in for folding money.....this largesse is typically in the $600-$800 range though I did have one for $1200 once....this behaviour is a guy thing IMO....most women do not do this as they carry a purse which contains their wallet that has a zippered/snap-click change enclosure that they use....a guy carries a wallet that holds 2 things...CASH & CARDS..I sometimes acumulate a small number of $5 bills in the course of a day and if they were in coin form I would be faced with 2 choices....chuck them in the bucket which would thusly increase the largess upon cash in or keeping them in my pocket.....I will cross that bridge when I have to.No. Perhaps eventually, but next up will likely be the paper $5 to be replaced with a coin.
Got to read it all dear. The Brinks truck was the first to crash, the third truck to hit was carrying the candy.Why would a Brinks truck be carrying candy??
"Workers clean up after a crash near Kirkland Lake, Ont., Wednesday, March 28, 2012. Millions of dollars in coins and a shipment of candy were scattered across the highway Wednesday following the crash of a Brinks tractor-trailer that seriously injured two people."
http://ca.news.yahoo.com/photos/bri...8-2012-millions-of-doll-photo-1333029243.html
You're welcome. Us old geezers have more time on our hands to follow up on stuff like this, not like you young un's always on the go.LOL, thanks uncleg xo
14..not quite old as dirt..................
I scored a perfect 20 out of 20!
Old fart, I got so many wrong that you make me feel young again. LOL.I scored a perfect 20 out of 20!
............don't know about that, but it seems they decay at the same rate.............Great minds think alike ......
...........now if other parts of your body could be trained to automatically go there.........................:eyebrows:Every time I skim the headline about pennies on the news sites I misread it as 'penises'.
I clearly need a break from reading these forums as my brain seems to be trained to automatically go there ...
i thought it was guy's brains that got stupid in the presence of pretty women...Every time I skim the headline about pennies on the news sites I misread it as 'penises'.
I clearly need a break from reading these forums as my brain seems to be trained to automatically go there ...
There would literally be outrage by most senior citizens. For some reason they are really against this.What I think is dumb about it is that if you pay cash, it rounds up or down but it is still the exact amount using debit or credit. You can't have two tiered pricing. I say if the price ends in two or less round down to zero, 3 or 4, up to five 6 or 7 down to 5, and 8 or 9 up to zero.





