Businesses
have been urged to get ready for the introduction of the new 12-sided
pound coin after claims it could cause retail chaos.
The
Royal Mint has launched a website calling for retailers to adapt their
equipment and make sure that their staff are trained to handle the
arrival of the newly shaped £1 in March 2017.
The
12-sided coin has been created in a bid to halt the current trade in
counterfeit pound coins, that has seen around one in 30 found to be
false. The new coins are said be much harder to replicate.
All machines
that accept cash will need to be adapted to accept the new currency and
the Royal Mint’s website has said that businesses will need to contact
their suppliers to make sure they will not be required to make changes.
In
the run up to the coin’s introduction in March, the Royal Mint has
advised that vendors’ machines are capable of accepting both the old and
new pound coins.
The website also says that business should ‘train your staff on the features of the new £1 coin’.
According to
the Royal Mint, the new coin will weigh 8.75g, 0.25g lighter than the
current £1 and will feature the fifth coin portrait of Queen Elizabeth
II on the ‘heads’ side.
The
design on the ‘tails’ side of the coin will show ‘the English rose,
Welsh leek, Scottish thistle and Northern Irish shamrock emerging from
one stem within a royal coronet’, designed by a 15-year-old, David
Pearce.
David Gauke,
the chief secretary to the Treasury, said: ‘The new £1 coin will be the
most secure of its kind in the world and its cutting-edge features will
present a significant barrier to counterfeiters, reducing the cost to
businesses and the taxpayer.’
During
the ‘co-circulation’ period the website suggests firms should accept
both coins and keep customers informed which coins their equipment can
accept.
Businesses may need to agree with their bank or cash in transit provider how to return the current £1 coin and new £1 coin.
No comments:
Post a Comment