Quizzes & Puzzles7 mins ago
What about a 99P coin and a �9.99 banknote?
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No best answer has yet been selected by Robert G. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.The reason for prices at one penny under a currency unit was to force staff to put the money into the till to get change. Also, there's some reverse psychology as retailers think that shoppers are so dim they only see the �9 bit of the �9.99 and so things seem cheaper than they are.
I don't think they will ever stop this, even if we moved to a cashless society.
I really don't think you'd want to carry around half a dozen bags of pennies to use in these circumstances. The shopkeeper can always refuse the sale anyway - or OTH might be eager to take them for change.
If the original reason for these prices is still valid (probably not these days) the the result would be a reduction in prices to �9.98 or even �9.95.
How can the shopkeeper refuse the sale? That cannot be on 'not legal tender' gounds, surely. Offer something for sale for 99Pence, and you can hardly refuse a proffered 99Pence! Anyway, it goes both ways: if a shopkeeper can refuse the sale, the shopper can also refuse the purchase and take his custom elsewhere.
In reply to the posting about paying for a 99p item with 1p coins, the Decimal Currency Act 1969 gives the following
"A tender of money if made, on or after the 15th day of February, 1971, in bronze coins issued under this Act shall be legal tender for the payment of an amount not exceeding twenty new pence but for no greater amount"
A bag of 1p pieces weighs 360grams or about 12 ounces - a few of those in your pocket and you'll know it.
(and no, I haven't weighed a bag to check, it's just one of those useless facts you pick up. Or useful if you ever have to count pennies...).
Actually if people did start trying this in a big way shops would just weigh the coins, just as the banks do when you pay coins in
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