A Penny
Saved is a Penny Earned
I came home to dinner and my wife
asked me what I had done today. I said,
"As I was walking from Hylan
Hall to the Faculty Club I came upon a penny lying in the slush, and so I
picked it up. It was covered with dirty
snow, full of the salt they put on the walks to keep us from slipping and
breaking our necks between buildings. I
couldn't put it in my pocket without cleaning it off, so I took a Kleenex out of my coat pocket (something rather hard
to do with my gloves on) and wiped it off.
After all, a penny saved is tax-free."
I like that line, "A penny
saved is tax-free," and I have been saying it for a long time. Sonya (my wife) must be tired of it by now,
but then, I'm pretty tired of some of the things she says. We've been married for forty-six years.
So that's approximately what I
said to her, before I asked her which
sort of wine we needed with dinner, and went down to the cellar to get a
suitable bottle. As I selected the wine
(a Cabernet Sauvignon) I thought about the penny: Is it really tax-free? I think not. The IRS tax regulations probably include windfalls like a found
penny under "Other Income," Line 22 near the bottom of Page 1 of Form
1040. I've been ignoring this for
years. I once even found a dime, and
never mentioned it to the IRS.
On the other hand, there are
certain expenses associated with picking up a penny, especially in the
winter. That Kleenex, for example, how
much did that cost? Coming upstairs
with the wine, I got out the corkscrew and began to open it, asking Sonya,
"How much does a box of Kleenex cost?" Various prices, she said, though she generally looked for
specials. If you found a good special
it might be as little as 87›. Since
there are 200 Kleenices in a box, it had cost me well over a third of a cent to
clean off that penny and keep it from dirtying my pocket. I could deduct that, I thought, with IRS
approval (Schedule A, Line 20).
But then, how much would I
actually be earning for the time I put in?
I know the IRS doesn't worry about such things, but I do. Time is money. I sniffed at the wine (not bad; a Charles Krug Napa Valley
Cabernet, 1988) and imagined myself standing ankle-deep in a sea of shiny new
pennies. How much could I actually earn
if I bent over and picked them up, one at a time, and put them in my
pocket? No muss, no fuss, no Kleenex;
just pure windfall pennies from Heaven.
Well, my back isn't what it used
to be, but the IRS isn't much interested in that either. Let's suppose me a healthy young man,
picking up pennies -- one at a time, remember, and putting each one separately
in my pocket before stooping for the next one -- and suppose I were trying to
make a living thereby. Even ankle-deep
in pennies, I can't imagine gathering them in at a rate of more than about five
per minute, tops.
Of course, if I were a
professional penny-picker I would be best off using a shovel or something, but
the situation I'm trying to imagine is not meant to be real, but rather a sort
of condensation of years and years of picking them up one at a time, a putting
together of one's actual experience in finding pennies. Over the course of my life, that is, at what
rate do I get paid when I pick up pennies, one at a time, and put them in
my pocket?
Five pennies per minute comes to
$3.00 per hour, less expenses. In my
childhood, in the days of the Great Depression, that would have been a handsome
wage, worth anyone's while, almost.
Indeed I remember my childhood very well, on Chene Street in Detroit,
not far from a closed and empty Chrysler plant, with unemployed men warming
their hands over scrap wood fires in perforated steel barrels on street
corners. A penny dropped on the ground
in those days didn't stay there very long; the man who picked one up could get
a whole hunk of bread, or a Tootsie Roll, for a penny. For five of them he could buy a hamburger.
But today a windfall penny is as
nothing, and even accumulated into $3.00 an hour it is less than Minimum Wage
-- maybe 0.K. for youngsters needing an entry-level part-time introduction to
the world of productive labor, but not really attractive for a college
professor with his own lumbar surgeon and a taste for Cabernet Sauvignon. And when you consider the Kleenex and taxes?
"O.K." I told my wife,
as we toasted each other across the dinner table, "I won't do it
again."
Ralph
A. Raimi
28
February 1994