I haven’t have any good chance to troll around with my camera for a while due to various reasons, simply busy, bad weather, tiered, wanted read some books, forgot to do and so on. It is likely that I miss this autumn. Today, I have taken some pictures having cheerful autumn colour.
I have visited two different places of production of grapes this week, one is famous for wines and the another is not well known but calm and quiet place to spend a week end. It was a hot and sweet experience.
I always keep remaining coins in my pocket despite myself when I go back home from foreign countries because I find myself touching different culture. Of course I know I need coins for the next time. Usually I take a break at the airport to get some coins because bank bills are sometimes useless. Even so, I always have coins in my hand on my way home.
At my first trip overseas, waiting for boarding to go back, I visited a bank to exchange money including coins according to a guidebook saying you couldn’t exchange any foreign coins in your country. I put all of coins and bills to a clerk. He was smiling and calculate it spending his time then said “okay here you have Japanese yen but it is difficult to exchange every coins.” And added “Have a cup of coffee or something.” Then, I spent relaxing time and learned I didn’t need to use every coins.
Today opportunity to use small coins seems to be less than ever. You can use a card even for automatic vending machines. Hence, I wasn’t unduly surprised by finding a news telling that the government of Japan increased the production of one-yen coins preparing for the new rate of consumption duty but coins didn’t go well in circulation.
In Australia and Canada, you can’t see any penny as daily use. It’s no production. When you need to treat fractions, you don’t need to take care but a store would offer you to make it round or donate.
A paper said one of the reasons to stop using one cent coins is that the production costs higher than a value of one cent. It sounds feasible but I don’t think it is a big reason. It could be the high operation cost of calculating and treating small coins compared to card payments. What was done away with was not a small payment but a penny.
Today you don’t need to keep one-yen coins in your pocket if you have some cards also in Japan. Some prepaid cards can be used for taking a train or a bus. It’s easy to understand why one-yen coins didn’t go well in circulation. Poor coins.