St. Louis Fed  |   Economic Research  |   EconDISC®  |   FRED®  |   GeoFRED®  |   ALFRED®  |   CASSIDI®  |   FRASER®  |   Liber8®  |   APIs  |   Fed System Help 
Logo: Economic Research, Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
 
Employment  |   Seminars  |   Monetary Aggregates  |   Tracking the Economy  
New! Tracking the Global Economy
To provide accurate and useful information on the current economic environment and the behavior of economic data around business cycle turning points, the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis presents Tracking the Global Economy. (2010-03-02)
The 2010 Homer Jones Lecture
Alan S. Blinder will present "Quantitative Easing: Entrance and Exit Strategies", Thursday, April 1, 2010, at the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis. (2010-03-01) More...
Recent Working Papers

"Crime and Arrests: Deterrence or Resource Reallocation?"
Working Paper 2010-011A by Thomas A. Garrett and Lesli S. Ott (2010-03-22)

"Personal-Bankruptcy Cycles"
Working Paper 2010-010A by Thomas A. Garrett and Howard J. Wall (2010-03-18)

"Liquidity Demand and Welfare in a Heterogeneous-Agent Economy"
Working Paper 2010-009A by Yi Wen (2010-03-15)

"Out-of-Sample Equity Premium Prediction: Economic Fundamentals vs. Moving-Average Rules"
Working Paper 2010-008A by Christopher J. Neely, David E. Rapach, Jun Tu, and Guofu Zhou (2010-03-10)

"Do Oil Shocks Drive Business Cycles? Some U.S. and International Evidence"
Working Paper 2010-007A by Kristie M. Engemann, Kevin L. Kliesen, and Michael T. Owyang (2010-03-03)

GeoFRED
A great tool for teachers and students. Create color-coded maps of labor force, population, unemployment and more.

CASSIDI
Review corporate relationships of banks. Analyze banking markets. Conduct pro forma HHI analysis.

FREDGraph
Create line, bar, pie, and scatter graphs of economic data. Completely customizable.

FRED
The largest FREE economic database of its kind with over 20,000 time series available.

CRE8
Conducts regional research. Connects community leaders and academic institutions. Assesses 8th District economic conditions.

FRASER
Access historical publications and statistical releases provided in searchable PDFs of scanned originals.

ALFRED
Takes you back in time to view historical data, reproduce past research, and build more accurate forecasting models.

Liber8
An extensive collection of links to key economic data, dictionaries, research, and more.

 Recent Review Articles - March/April 2010

"Lessons Learned? Comparing the Federal Reserve’s Responses to the Crises of 1929-1933 and 2007-2009"
by David C. Wheelock
The financial crisis of 2007-09 is widely viewed as the worst financial disruption since the Great Depression of 1929-33. However, the accompanying economic recession was mild compared with the Great Depression, though severe by postwar standards.

"Institutions and Government Growth: A Comparison of the 1890s and the 1930s"
by Thomas A. Garrett, Andrew F. Kozak, and Russell M. Rhine
Statistics on the size and growth of the U.S. federal government, in addition to public statements by President Franklin Roosevelt, seem to indicate that the Great Depression was the primary event that caused the dramatic growth in government spending and intervention in the private sector that continues to the present day.

"Fiscal Multipliers in War and in Peace"
by David Andolfatto
Proponents of fiscal stimulus argue that government spending is needed to replace the private spending normally lost during a recession. Estimates of the so-called fiscal multiplier based on wartime episodes are used to support the proposition that a peacetime intervention can “stimulate” the economy in a desirable manner. The author argues that a wartime crisis is fundamentally different from a peacetime economic crisis.

"FOMC Learning and Productivity Growth (1985-2003): A Reading of the Record"
by Richard G. Anderson and Kevin L. Kliesen
The increasingly rapid productivity growth that began in the 1990s was the defining economic event of the decade and a major topic of debate among Federal Reserve policymakers. A key aspect of the debate was the contrast between information contained in aggregate data, which initially suggested little productivity gain, and anecdotal firm-level evidence, which hinted at the productivity acceleration.

More Review Articles ...
FRED At a Glance

CPI +2.2 % in Feb 2010, % Chg. Year Ago (Revision Graph)

CPI Graph - Latest Revisions

Real GDP +5.6 % in 2009Q4, Comp. Ann. Rate of Chg. (Revision Graph)

Real GDP Graph - Latest Revisions

IP +0.1 % in Feb 2010, % Chg. (Revision Graph)

IP Graph - Latest Revisions

10-Yr. Treas. Rate 3.84 % on 2010-03-24

US/Euro FX Rate 1.353 on 2010-03-19

Japan/US FX Rate 90.5 on 2010-03-19

Civ. Unemploy. Rate 9.7 % in Feb 2010 (Revision Graph)

Civ. Unemploy. Rate Graph - Latest Revisions

Payroll Employment -36.0 in Feb 2010, Chg. (Revision Graph)

Payroll Employment Graph - Latest Revisions

Initial Jobless Claims 453750 on 2010-03-20 (Revision Graph)

Initial Jobless Claims Graph - Latest Revisions
Recent Data Publications

U.S. Financial Data, March 26 Issue
A weekly publication that includes charts and tables relating to weekly monetary and reserve aggregates, selected interest rates, commercial bank loans, and more. (2010-03-25) More USFD...

Monetary Trends, April Issue
A monthly publication that reviews U.S. monetary and financial conditions with an emphasis on various measures of the monetary policy stance. (2010-03-16) More MT...

National Economic Trends, March Issue
A monthly publication that presents a snapshot of the U.S. economy. (2010-03-01) More NET...

International Economic Trends, February Issue
A quarterly publication that includes economic statistics and charts for G-7 and euro area countries. (2010-01-25) More IET...


  About | Contact Us | Privacy | Legal Top of Page