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Home > Monetary Aggregates
Please Note: As of April 14, 2006, the MSI series will not be updated until we complete revisions to the code to handle the discontinuance of M3.
This page collects a variety of information regarding research on the monetary aggregates at the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis.
Currently published monetary data are on FRED®, the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis' free Internet
economic data service. Except for currency, monthly figures begin in 1959 and weekly figures begin in 1975.
Two Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis publications review recent monetary growth:
- Monetary Trends, a monthly publication
A graphical review of U.S. monetary and financial conditions. The cover contains an essay on a current topic
concerning money, financial markets, or a related issue.
- US Financial Data, a weekly publication
A graphical review of U.S. monetary and financial conditions. The cover contains a calendar of recent and upcoming economic
news, with estimates of market expectations.
Two books that our customers frequently find useful are:
Historical Monetary Data
We often receive requests for monetary aggregates data that cover time periods prior to January 1959,
the beginning date for the Board of Governors currently published monetary aggregates. Various data
are available for these years, but not all data are consistent with the current definitions of the
Board's monetary aggregates. This section discusses available data. The problem is not one of finding
data; the problem is one of constructing monetary aggregates that are consistent with currently published definitions.
Some common sources of historical monetary data are:
- Banking and Monetary Statistics, two volumes (volume 1 1914-1940, and volume 2 1941-1970). Originally published
by the Federal Reserve Board, now out of print. Available on FRASER®.
- A Monetary History of the United States, 1867-1960, by Milton Friedman and Anna J. Schwartz (Princeton University Press, 1963).
- Monetary Statistics of the United States, by Milton Friedman and Anna J. Schwartz (1970) (out of print).
- Appendix B: Historical Data, by Nathan S. Balke and Robert J. Gordon, in R.J. Gordon, ed., The American Business Cycle
(University of Chicago Press for the National Bureau of Economic Research, 1986), pp. 781-850.
- Historical Statistics of the United States, Millenium Edition, (Cambridge University Press, 2006).
The chapter by Richard Anderson that discusses historical monetary aggregates is available as
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis working paper 2003-006. A data appendix to that working paper containing images of
selected original source documents is available: Some Tables of Historical U.S. Currency and Monetary Aggregates Data.
Historical (Pre-1959) Monetary Aggregates
Robert H. Rasche
- Robert H. Rasche, in articles from 1987 and 1990, produced monetary aggregates for
1948-1958 that are consistent with current Federal Reserve Board definitions. The official measures of the money stock in
the United States currently published by the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System start with January, 1959.
Excerts from Rasche's two articles are below. For a history of the Federal Reserve's definitions of monetary aggregates,
see Anderson and Kavajecz (1994)
and Kavajecz (1994).
- M1: The attached files contain data that provide a measure of M1 and the currency component of M1 (seasonally adjusted)
beginning January, 1929. These data follow the method outlined in Rasche (1987).
Download:
- M2 and M3: The attached files contain data that provide measures of M1, M2 and M3 series for the period 1948-58. These
data follow the methods in Rasche (1990). The M1 component differs slightly from that produced by the method in Rasche
(1987) because it omits the "shift adjustment" for flows into the checkable deposit component of M1. These
data are constructed via a Rats program, available here as a zipped file.
Download:
- Rasche (1987) Appendix A from Robert H. Rasche Paper "M1 - Velocity and Money-Demand Functions: Do Stable Relationship Exist?"
Reprinted from Journal of Monetary Economics, 1987, 27, pp. 70-72, Copyright 1987, with permission from Elsevier.
- Rasche (1990) Appendix from Robert H. Rasche Paper "Demand Functions for Measures of U. S. Money and Debt"
Reprinted from Financial Sectors in Open Economies: Empirical Analysis and Policy Issues published by the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, 1990.
Retail Deposit Sweep Programs
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis Monetary Base and Reserves
- Data are available in the Reserves and Monetary Base category of FRED.
- Article: "A Reconstruction of the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis’ Adjusted Monetary Base and Reserves" (PDF 1.0M)
Richard G. Anderson and Robert H. Rasche, with Jeffrey Loesel.
Data and Programs (.xls)
Review September/October 2003, 85(5), pp. 39-70.
- Article: "Retail Sweep Programs and Bank Reserves, 1994-1999" (PDF 299K)
Richard G. Anderson and Robert H. Rasche
Data (.xls)
Programs (.prg)
Review January/February 2001, 83(1), pp. 51-72.
- Article: "Eighty Years of Observations on the Adjusted Monetary Base: 1918-1997" (PDF 1.0M)
Richard G. Anderson and Robert H. Rasche
Data and Programs (.exe)
Data and Programs (.zip)
Review January/February 1999, 81(1), pp. 3-13.
- Article: "A Revised Measure of the St. Louis Adjusted Monetary Base" (PDF 380K)
Richard G. Anderson and Robert H. Rasche
Data and Programs (.exe)
Data and Programs (.zip)
Review March/April 1996, 78(2), pp. 3-37.
- Article: "Revision of the Monetary Base" (PDF 1.5M)
Albert E. Burger and Robert H. Rasche
Review July 1977, 59(7), pp. 13-27.
- Article: "Derivation of the Monetary Base" (PDF 531K)
Anatol B. Balbach and Albert E. Burger
Review November 1976, 58(11), pp. 2-8.
- Article: "The Monetary Base -- Explanation and Analytical Use" (PDF 610K)
Leonall C. Andersen and Jerry L. Jordan
Review August 1968, 50(8), pp. 7-11.
Monetary Services Index (MSI)
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