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Mexico to shrink coins to save on metal

MEXICO CITY: Does it feel like your money is shrinking nowadays? In some countries around the world, it really is getting smaller.

Mexico, following the lead of several countries around the world, has proposed making coins smaller and using cheaper metals to keep cost low amid the financial crisis and volatile metal costs.

The Mexican Senate on Thursday approved President Felipe Calderon’s bill to modify the country’s coinage. The plan awaits approval from the lower house of Congress, which will vote in February.

“We’re being hit hard economically, so we’re looking to spend more efficiently,” said Enrique Lobato, director of cash programming for Mexico’s central bank.

The Mexican economy is running a 1.8 per cent budget deficit, the country’s first in years, and next year’s 3 trillion peso ($224 billion) budget will be tight.

Production costs

Mr. Lobato said under Calderon’s proposal, the bank could save around 200 million pesos ($14.7 million) per year in production costs.

Total production costs on coins this year reached nearly a billion pesos ($73.5 million,) he said. Costs include the price of metals and minting the coins. The bank produces around 1.5 billion coins each year.

Mexico has eight kinds of coins at the following amounts: 5, 10, 20 and 50 cents, and 1, 2, 5 and 10 pesos. The plan, if approved, would shrink the size of the four smaller coins, and reduce the amounts of copper, zinc and nickel alloys in each of the peso coins, and in the 20 and 50 cent coins.

In Mexico, the use of coins has grown by about 6 per cent annually, the government says. Around 20 billion coins are in circulation.

Many countries have done the same to cut costs in their moneymaking. Australia and New Zealand recently eliminated their 1 and 5 cent coins, and New Zealand in 2006 significantly reduced the size of its 10, 20 and 50 cent coins.

In the United States, the U.S. Mint is lobbying Congress to make the penny more cost-effective. The 1-cent copper-coloured disc now costs 1.2 cents to produce. Countries often will change coin production when inflation and metal prices alter coins’ value and cost-effectiveness, said Francois Velde, a senior economist with the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago. “This most likely happens in times of high inflation, of sharp currency devaluation or in times of high commodities prices,” he said. “The lowest denominations are typically hit first, because inflation eats away at their real value.”

Mexico’s annual inflation hit a seven-year high of 6.2 per cent in the first two weeks of November, and the peso has tumbled more than 30 per cent against the dollar since August 1. — AP

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