PDA

View Full Version : The coin worth less than any other in the world



madfranks
26th February 2013, 02:43 PM
The world's most worthless coin, still legal tender, is the Uzbekistan one-tiyin coin, worth approximately 1/2000 of one US Cent. You would need 200,000 of these coins to equal the purchasing power of one FRN!!!

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-21572359

http://news.bbcimg.co.uk/media/images/66070000/jpg/_66070579_tiyin624.jpg

This month the Canadian mint stopped distributing the penny, or one-cent piece, as it costs more to make than it is worth. It's far from being the lowest-value coin around, however. Some central banks are clinging on to coins that are truly "small change".

There are many precedents for scrapping small coins. The US abolished the half-cent in 1857 and the UK's halfpenny was withdrawn in 1984. New Zealand and Australia abandoned the one-cent and two-cent coin in the 1990s.

Now some campaigners in the US and UK want the penny to be scrapped, because nothing can be bought with a one-cent or one-penny coin.

"The point of currency is to facilitate cash transactions. It used to be that a penny could serve that purpose because it was worth something but that's no longer the case" says Jeff Gore, president of Citizens to Retire the US Penny.

Handling them wastes time at tills, he argues - between two and two-and-a-half seconds per cash transaction, according to one study.

Imagine, then, the possible delays if someone in Tanzania insisted in paying for shopping with a pocket-full - or more likely a bag-full - of five-cent coins. One UK penny is equal to 494 of these, while a US cent is equal to 325.

But there are coins, still legal tender, that have even lower value.

Take the Burmese Pya - the UK penny is worth 1,300 of them (the US cent is worth 850).

The lowest-value coin of all is the Tiyin from Uzbekistan. Some 3,038 equate to one UK penny (and 2,000 tot up to one US cent).

Small change




Country
Smallest coin
How many = 1 US cent
How many = 1 UK penny


Uzbekistan

1 Tiyin

1,999

3,038



Burma

1 Pya

855

1,300



Tanzania

5 Cent

325

494



North Korea

1 Chon

132

201



Sri Lanka

1 Cent

126

192



Jamaica

1 Cent

92

140



Bangladesh

1 Paisa

79

120



Guinea

1 Centime

70

106



Madagascar

2 Iraimbilanja

55

84



Philippines

1 Centavo

41

62



Armenia

10 Luma

41

62



In practice, however, while these coins are legal tender, you would struggle to find them in everyday life.

"In Tanzania it's unlikely to find the five-cent coin in circulation because it literally cannot buy anything. The smallest you would probably find in the streets is 20 cents and you can buy a bunch of spinach in the local market for this," says Emanuel Boaz from the Tanzanian Central Bank.

Most five-cent coins in Tanzania languish in the vaults of the central bank or have been lost forever in the nooks and crannies of people's homes.

In Uzbekistan, the Uzbek Tiyin is also a rare sight. These days, you are more likely to get a box of matches or a sweet, as change.

Inflation has consigned even the largest-denomination Tiyin coins to history, though they remain legal tender.

gunDriller
26th February 2013, 03:06 PM
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uzbekistani_som

brass clad steel.

WHOA !

check out the Burmese Pya -
2.2 g Bronze
90% copper
10% zinc

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Burmese_kyat

so the 1 Pya coin - if it's available and they didn't change materials - 85,500 per US $.

pay $1 in FRN's, get 85,500 x 2 grams of copper, about 170,000 grams ... 374 pounds of copper !

copper today is going for about $3.57 ... $1335 worth of copper for $1.


something tells me they changed materials. :)

gunny highway
26th February 2013, 03:47 PM
i think all the countries on the above list of the most worthless coins were also members of the "Coalition of the Willing". Coincidence?

osoab
26th February 2013, 04:07 PM
i think all the countries on the above list of the most worthless coins were also members of the "Coalition of the Willing". Coincidence?

Burma isn't. I wonder why they are not using Myanmar.

StreetsOfGold
26th February 2013, 05:27 PM
You would need 200,000 of these coins to equal the purchasing power of one FRN!!!

I would gladly give up one FRN for 200,000 of those coins....anytime :)

govcheetos
1st March 2013, 12:07 PM
I would gladly give up one FRN for 200,000 of those coins....anytime :)

Drill holes in them and use them for washers. Where can you buy 200,000 washers for a single FRN?

Or simply sell them for scrap, should gain some ROI.

Or better yet, buy 10-20 frn worth and pave your driveway.