United States - Broad money to total reserves ratio

Broad money to total reserves ratio in United States was 37.08 as of 2020. Its highest value over the past 60 years was 58.28 in 2001, while its lowest value was 11.59 in 1980.

Definition: Broad money (IFS line 35L..ZK) is the sum of currency outside banks; demand deposits other than those of the central government; the time, savings, and foreign currency deposits of resident sectors other than the central government; bank and traveler’s checks; and other securities such as certificates of deposit and commercial paper.

Source: International Monetary Fund, International Financial Statistics and data files.

See also:

Year Value
1960 16.59
1961 18.75
1962 22.29
1963 24.90
1964 27.40
1965 32.12
1966 34.86
1967 38.59
1968 35.02
1969 37.07
1970 46.07
1971 53.94
1972 44.16
1973 29.70
1974 19.38
1975 27.57
1976 29.69
1977 27.52
1978 23.53
1979 12.53
1980 11.59
1981 17.96
1982 17.07
1983 21.54
1984 28.46
1985 27.39
1986 25.26
1987 22.74
1988 27.24
1989 24.54
1990 24.54
1991 27.07
1992 29.18
1993 26.30
1994 26.58
1995 26.40
1996 31.19
1997 40.14
1998 40.63
1999 47.61
2000 54.70
2001 58.28
2002 50.19
2003 44.92
2004 45.89
2005 50.18
2006 46.58
2007 41.45
2008 42.32
2009 32.49
2010 26.12
2011 25.35
2012 24.88
2013 33.30
2014 36.16
2015 42.22
2016 41.44
2017 39.07
2018 40.77
2019 38.48
2020 37.08

Periodicity: Annual

Classification

Topic: Financial Sector Indicators

Sub-Topic: Monetary holdings (liabilities)