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Keywords:Federal Reserve banks - Costs 

Journal Article
Statement to Congress, July 18, 1991 (Federal Reserve System's expenses and budget for 1991)

Federal Reserve Bulletin , Issue Sep , Pages 715-722

Journal Article
Statement to Congress, August 3, 1989 (1989 budget of the Federal Reserve System)

Federal Reserve Bulletin , Issue Oct , Pages 677-684

Journal Article
Preliminary figures on operating income for 1992 released

Federal Reserve Bulletin , Issue Mar

Journal Article
Preliminary figures available on operating income and expenses of the Federal Reserve banks

Federal Reserve Bulletin , Issue Mar , Pages 204-205

Journal Article
Preliminary figures on operating income for 1993 released

Federal Reserve Bulletin , Issue Mar , Pages 237-238

Journal Article
Preliminary figures released January 10, 1986

Federal Reserve Bulletin , Issue Mar

Working Paper
Optimal employment of scale economies in the Federal Reserve's currency infrastructure

Given estimates of shipping costs and scale economies for high-speed currency sorting, the authors investigate whether the Federal Reserve might lower its costs by reallocating the volume of sorting among its processing sites.
Working Papers (Old Series) , Paper 9810

Journal Article
Statement to Congress, May 6, 1987 (budget of the Federal Reserve System)

Federal Reserve Bulletin , Issue Jul , Pages 563-569

Journal Article
Preliminary figures available on operating income of the Federal Reserve Banks

Federal Reserve Bulletin , Issue Mar , Pages 220

Working Paper
The effect of pricing on demand and revenue in Federal Reserve ACH payment processing

Because the automated clearinghouse (ACH) has been found to have lower social costs than paper checks, the Federal Reserve has been promoting more widespread use of ACH by lowering ACH processing fees. In this paper we have obtained the first numerical estimates of ACH demand elasticities, a measure of the responsiveness of ACH demand to price changes. In order to determine how robust the estimates are, various methods were employed to estimate the demand elasticities. Our results show that the volume of ACH items processed by the Federal Reserve does respond to changes in per-item fees. We ...
Working Papers , Paper 97-6

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