Marin Independent Journal

Businesses seek Treasury help with coin shortage

- By Fatima Hussein

Got a dime you can spare? Coins are in short supply — again.

Retailers, laundromat­s and other businesses that rely on coins want Americans to empty their piggy banks and look under couch cushions for extra change and “get coin moving.”

A group of trade associatio­ns that represent individual businesses including banks, retail outlets, truck stops, grocery stores and more is asking the Treasury Department for more help convincing Americans to get coins back in circulatio­n.

The consequenc­es of the circulatio­n slowdown hit people who don't have an ability to pay for items electronic­ally, they say.

“If retailers are not able to offer change for cash purchases consumers who rely on cash will be vulnerable,” the associatio­ns said in a letter to Treasury.

For example, people who do their laundry at coin laundry mats could have a harder time finding change to wash their clothes. And on a larger scale, people who don't have cash access aren't able to patronize certain card-only businesses.

It's not a coin shortage America faces, but a lack of circulatio­n.

“We can't print our way out of this problem,” said Austen Jensen, a senior vice president for government affairs at the Retail Industry Leaders Associatio­n.

Jensen's group, along with the American Bankers Associatio­n, National Associatio­n of Convenienc­e Stores, and National Grocers Associatio­n, is trying to meet consumer demand and wants a new public campaign to increase coin circulatio­n.

Jensen said his group is also encouragin­g member retailers to find creative ways to deal with the shortage of coins, including rounding-up purchases for charity promotions. And he says businesses with multiple locations could send coins from one store to another.

This is not the first time during the pandemic that the issue of low coin circulatio­n has arisen.

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