Access Statistics for Richard G. Anderson

Author contact details at EconPapers.

Working Paper File Downloads Abstract Views
Last month 3 months 12 months Total Last month 3 months 12 months Total
A historical perspective on the Federal Reserve's monetary aggregates 0 1 3 56 0 3 12 462
A revised measure of the St. Louis adjusted monetary base 0 1 1 138 2 7 11 1,957
A specialized inventory problem in banks: optimizing retail sweeps 0 0 0 58 1 8 11 342
A vector error correction forecasting model of the U.S. economy 0 0 1 376 2 8 19 822
Analysis of panel vector error correction models using maximum likelihood, the bootstrap, and canonical-correlation estimators 0 0 2 370 1 6 19 1,121
Building new monetary services indices: methodology and source data 0 0 1 46 1 5 13 243
Connectionist-based rules describing the pass-through of individual goods prices into trend inflation in the United States 0 0 0 21 2 7 9 115
Construction of an estimated domestic monetary base using new estimates of foreign holdings of U.S. currency 0 0 0 42 2 3 3 278
Defining the adjusted monetary base in an era of financial change 0 0 0 99 0 7 8 978
Does Commonality in Illiquidity Matter to Investors? 0 0 0 8 0 2 2 84
Does commonality in illiquidity matter to investors? 0 0 0 15 3 5 11 96
Does money matter in inflation forecasting? 0 0 0 165 1 6 12 401
Dynamics in Systematic Liquidity 0 0 0 33 0 3 7 159
Dynamics in systematic liquidity 0 0 0 46 1 2 7 192
Handicapping currency design: counterfeit deterrence and visual accessibility in the United States and abroad 0 0 0 44 1 5 8 240
How does the FOMC learn about economic revolutions? evidence from the New Economy Era, 1994-2001 0 0 0 20 1 5 11 61
Mean-Variance vs. Full-Scale Optimization: Broad Evidence for the UK 0 0 0 24 0 3 5 218
Mean-variance vs. full-scale optimization: broad evidence for the U.K 0 0 0 107 1 6 11 364
Modeling U.S. households' demand for liquid wealth in an era of financial change 0 0 0 74 0 6 16 419
Monetary aggregation theory and statistical index numbers 0 0 1 95 0 2 8 484
Monetary base 0 0 0 110 1 7 11 322
Money and Velocity During Financial Crises: From the Great Depression to the Great Recession 0 0 2 132 3 15 25 155
Money and velocity during financial crises: from the Great Depression to the Great Recession 0 0 0 114 3 10 16 222
Nonlinear relationship between permanent and transitory components of monetary aggregates and the economy 0 0 0 70 1 7 8 271
Offshoring, economic insecurity, and the demand for social insurance 0 0 0 55 1 5 10 195
Productivity measurement and monetary policymaking during the 1990s 0 0 0 37 1 7 12 166
Replication and scientific standards in economics a decade later: the impact of JMCB project 0 0 0 24 0 0 1 247
Retail deposit sweep programs: issues for measurement, modeling and analysis 0 0 0 77 0 3 8 437
Retail sweep programs and bank reserves, 1994--1999 0 0 0 110 4 9 13 618
Some tables of historical U.S. currency and monetary aggregates data 0 1 1 185 2 10 12 701
The domestic adjusted monetary base 0 0 0 196 0 4 10 1,240
The perils of globalization: offshoring and economic insecurity of the American worker 0 0 0 50 1 6 11 261
The remarkable stability of monetary base velocity in the United States, 1919-1999 0 0 0 171 3 7 15 716
The role of data & program code archives in the future of economic research 0 0 0 108 2 9 13 355
Total Working Papers 0 3 12 3,276 41 198 368 14,942


Journal Article File Downloads Abstract Views
Last month 3 months 12 months Total Last month 3 months 12 months Total
A case for oil? 0 0 0 12 2 6 7 94
A closer look: assistance programs in the wake of the crisis 0 0 0 14 2 5 5 62
A comprehensive revision of the U.S. monetary services (divisia) indexes 0 0 0 49 2 11 13 247
A historical perspective on the Federal Reserve's monetary aggregates: definition, construction and targeting 0 0 1 6 2 6 7 55
A historical perspective on the Federal Reserve's monetary aggregates: definition, construction and targeting 0 0 1 179 1 2 7 951
A neutral federal funds rate? 0 0 1 48 0 2 6 259
A new look at the relationship between time-series and structural econometric models 0 0 0 4 0 0 3 65
A reconstruction of the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis adjusted monetary base and reserves 0 0 0 54 5 12 15 329
A revised measure of the St. Louis adjusted monetary base 1 1 2 22 2 12 19 213
A vector error-correction forecasting model of the US economy 0 0 1 146 1 10 12 380
Accounting and the economics of the trade deficit 0 0 0 18 2 3 3 82
Bagehot on the financial crises of 1825...and 2008 0 1 1 37 0 8 9 117
Bankers acceptances and unconventional monetary policy: FAQs 0 0 0 21 0 2 2 70
Bankers' acceptances: yesterday's instrument to restart today's credit markets? 0 0 0 24 0 1 1 103
Banks and credit unions: competition not going away 0 0 1 37 2 7 10 107
Confidence Intervals for Elasticity Estimators in Translog Models 0 0 0 189 0 9 11 539
Connectionist-based rules describing the pass-through of individual goods prices into trend inflation in the United States 0 0 0 2 1 4 7 66
Currency design in the United States and abroad: counterfeit deterrence and visual accessibility 0 0 1 39 1 3 8 216
Does money matter in inflation forecasting? 0 0 0 15 1 6 8 133
Does uncertainty about oil prices slow down the economy? 0 1 1 34 0 2 4 139
Doubling your monetary base and surviving: some international experience 0 0 0 47 0 3 10 289
Driving to recession and recovery 0 0 0 4 2 6 8 40
Editor's introduction 0 0 0 1 1 3 5 42
Eighty years of observations on the adjusted monetary base: 1918-1997 0 0 1 107 0 2 8 529
Energy and the economy 0 0 0 12 3 4 5 59
Estimating U.S. output growth with vintage data in a state-space framework 0 0 0 40 2 3 6 219
FOMC learning and productivity growth (1985-2003): a reading of the record 1 1 1 11 3 9 9 60
Fueling expected inflation 0 0 0 20 2 4 5 84
Has expected inflation decreased? 0 0 0 85 0 2 3 415
Has the long-run velocity of M2 shifted? Evidence from the P* model 0 0 0 42 0 5 8 229
How Does the FOMC Learn About Economic Revolutions? Evidence from the New Economy Era, 1994–2001 0 0 0 1 2 6 6 34
How low can you go? negative interest rates and investors’ flight to safety 0 0 1 104 1 3 5 273
How positive are recent employment and labor market trends? 0 0 0 5 5 7 10 46
How well do wages follow productivity growth? 0 0 1 54 0 3 5 138
Inflation's economic cost: how large? how certain? 0 0 0 45 1 3 4 122
Interpreting monetary growth 0 0 0 12 0 4 4 63
Is more QE in sight? 0 0 0 6 0 4 4 53
Japan as a role model? 0 1 1 33 3 6 7 112
Liquidity crises in the small and large 0 0 0 16 2 5 5 62
MEAN–VARIANCE VERSUS FULL‐SCALE OPTIMIZATION: BROAD EVIDENCE FOR THE UK 0 0 0 16 3 9 10 133
Measuring the adjusted monetary base in an era of financial change 0 0 0 117 0 5 5 618
Meeting the Y2K demand for base money 0 0 0 9 0 3 8 79
Modeling U.S. Households' Demands for Liquid Wealth in an Era of Financial Change 0 0 0 0 2 5 9 158
Monetary policy and productivity 0 0 0 67 0 3 3 169
Monetary policy's third interest rate 0 0 0 24 0 6 6 70
Monetary policy, bubbles, and goldilocks 0 0 0 9 2 7 7 56
Money stock measurement: history, theory and implication - introduction 0 0 0 2 2 4 5 27
Money stock measurement: history, theory and implication - introduction 0 0 0 36 1 5 7 277
Mutual funds and monetary aggregates - introduction 0 0 0 4 2 6 6 22
Mutual funds and monetary aggregates - introduction 0 0 0 26 2 5 5 206
On the road to recovery, soft patches turn up often 0 0 0 17 1 2 3 62
Paying interest on deposits at Federal Reserve banks 0 0 0 14 1 3 4 80
Perfecting housing finance 0 0 0 12 0 2 3 76
Quantitative easing the Swedish way 0 0 0 47 1 2 4 197
Real output in Switzerland: new estimates for 1914-47 0 0 2 62 2 7 10 457
Replicability, real-time data, and the science of economic research: FRED, ALFRED, and VDC 0 0 3 81 1 6 20 475
Replication and scientific standards in applied economics a decade after the Journal of Money, Credit and Banking project 0 0 1 85 0 3 6 386
Replication in Empirical Economics: The Journal of Money, Credit and Banking Project 0 0 3 704 3 12 31 2,676
Replication in Empirical Economics: The Journal of Money, Credit and Banking Project: Reply 0 0 0 68 2 13 14 290
Reply to the comments on 'A vector error-correction forecasting model of the U.S. economy' 0 0 0 7 0 2 6 119
Resolving a banking crisis, the Nordic way 0 0 1 57 4 9 10 179
Retail sweep programs and bank reserves, 1994-1999 1 1 1 65 1 11 16 485
Retail sweep programs and money demand 0 0 0 24 0 3 5 115
Revisions to user costs for the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis monetary services indices 0 0 0 17 1 3 5 291
Special report: The monetary services index project of the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis: building new monetary services indexes: concepts, data and methods 0 1 1 71 1 6 7 302
Special report: The monetary services index project of the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis: introduction to the St. Louis monetary services index project 0 0 0 66 3 11 13 407
Special report: The monetary services index project of the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis: monetary aggregation theory and statistical index numbers 0 0 0 30 2 8 13 208
TIPS for social security? 0 0 1 7 1 3 7 74
The 1990s acceleration in labor productivity: causes and measurement 0 0 0 63 3 10 14 347
The CPFF is regarded as a hallmark of success among credit-easing policies 0 0 0 32 1 3 4 138
The FOMC in 1978 0 0 0 8 0 3 3 47
The FOMC: transparency achieved? 0 0 0 4 1 5 6 47
The FOMCs considerable period 0 0 0 22 0 3 7 142
The GAUSS Programming System: A Review 0 0 0 82 1 4 4 288
The Treatment of Intermediate Materialsin the Estimation of the Demand for Energy: The Case of U.S. Manufacturing, 1947-1971 0 0 0 3 1 2 3 57
The commercial paper market, the Fed, and the 2007-2009 financial crisis 0 0 1 113 4 18 26 522
The curious case of the U.S. monetary base 0 0 0 29 0 5 5 124
The effect of mortgage refinancing on money demand and the monetary aggregates 0 1 1 38 3 7 8 187
The financial services sector: boom and recession 0 0 0 37 0 6 6 101
The first U.S. quantitative easing: the 1930s 0 0 0 131 1 8 11 320
The long-run benefits of sustained low inflation 0 0 0 21 0 3 4 121
The role of data/code archives in the future of economic research 0 0 0 75 6 8 11 299
The root of the problems of the British banks is the same as that of American banks: shaky mortgage-backed securities 0 0 0 16 1 5 7 71
U.S. currency at home and abroad 0 0 0 35 1 5 6 108
What Do Money Market Models Tell Us about How to Implement Monetary Policy? 0 0 0 51 4 6 7 182
What is driving oil prices? 0 0 0 98 1 3 7 244
Whither the New Economy? 0 0 0 8 1 2 4 72
Wicksell's natural rate 1 1 1 73 3 7 9 203
Yield curve inversions and cyclical peaks 0 0 0 34 1 3 11 123
Total Journal Articles 4 9 31 4,312 122 473 685 19,533


Statistics updated 2026-03-04