BRUSSELS — Small change in the euro, one and two-cent coins, expensive to make and a nuisance for many, may have no future, the European Commission said Tuesday.
Small and awkward they may be: but they have cost the eurozone about 1.4 billion euros since 2002, the Commission said.
The Commission outlined four possible scenarios for the coins, based on a cost-benefit analysis of their use — the status quo, making cheaper versions, and a speedy or a gradual withdrawal.
It said public attitudes are mixed overall.
Some people fear a spike in inflation if the small coins — which account for about half of all coinage in circulation — are dropped since prices would inevitably be rounded up.
While the cost of minting the coins would argue for withdrawal, that needs to be “balanced against other considerations, notably the negative reaction from the general public that rounding rules could trigger,” a statement said.
The Commission will now take up the issue with member states to see whether a “clear preference emerges on which to base a legislative proposal.”
Besides the euro’s one- and two-cent coins, there are coins of five, 10, 20 and 50.
Since January 2002, euro area member states have issued more than 45.8 billion one- and two-cent coins, the equivalent of 137 coins per capita, according to the Commission.