The lowly US penny has lost its shine

April 11, 1984

Britain has done it. So have Brazil, Norway, Argentina, and probably others. They have discontinued the coinage and use of lowly, penny-type coins. And it has been recommended for the United States.

The President's Grace commission, seeking economies in government, stated in January that the elimination of America's copper-washed penny would save $70 million a year. It's not a new suggestion. In 1976 a congressional study also urged the coin be phased out.

But nothing like that is about to happen. Right now, the US Mint produces 14 billion cent-pieces each year.

Part of this is necessary - if the penny is to be circulated usefully - because about 5 billion of the coins disappear from circulation each year.

Numismatists say that except for rare-date years, pennies have lost their ''shine'' for collectors.

On the practical side, as everyone knows, many individual change-carriers sort out the pennies - maybe just toss them into a drawer - because except as change on sales-tax calculations, they are not needed in many transactions today.

Once upon a time the penny could purchase chewing gum, parking-meter time, candy, soda water, and even matches. But now the coin is in disregard, except as a figure of advertising speech, ''One Cent Sale.''