blutoski
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Jan 10, 2006
- Messages
- 12,454
The pen is about $3.00
Which is expensive to a small business, is what I'm saying.
I managed our call center for small business customers, they would happily spend an hour on the phone disputing a 7c long distance charge.
As the above poster, there's usually a cost effectiveness threshold for mandatory swiping (here in Canada it's typically $50s and $100s)
Otherwise, you're going through three of these a day, about $3k/yr to catch the one counterfeit $5 in the same timeframe. It's not cost effective unless you concentrate on the $50s and $100s, for two reasons: firstly these are the denominations that get counterfeitted. Hardly any counterfeitters fab smaller bills. This is the low hanging fruit. And then secondly, it's the cost/benefit analysis of finding *any* counterfeits at all. Small bills, sheesh, just absorb them, the cost of coming up short on the daily deposit from a fake $5 is cheaper than penning all bills.
And even then, 99 times out of 100 it's an old lady who is passing it in good faith, some businesses just socialize it: ma'am, this came up counterfeit, do you have another we can use instead? Why get the cops involved.
ETA: incidentally, I had an experience in Alberta, when I was a teenager. A cashier freaked out when I tried to pay with a $2. Alberta is Texas North, and they try to be as American as possible, the banks don't issue $2 bills much b/c the public consider it too Canadian. So this cashier had literally never seen a $2 bill and just assumed it was counterfeit. I straightened it out with the manager, we phoned his bank, they confirmed the bills were real and would be accepted.
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