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Ryan S. Mattson

Researcher at University of Kansas

Publications -  10
Citations -  206

Ryan S. Mattson is an academic researcher from University of Kansas. The author has contributed to research in topics: Divisia index & Divisia monetary aggregates index. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 10 publications receiving 188 citations. Previous affiliations of Ryan S. Mattson include Texas A&M University.

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The New CFS Divisia Monetary Aggregates: Design, Construction, and Data Sources

TL;DR: The Center for Financial Stability (CFS) has initiated a new Divisia monetary aggregates database, maintained within the CFS program called Advances in Monetary and Financial Measurement (AMFM).
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The new CFS Divisia monetary aggregates: design, construction, and data sources

TL;DR: The Center for Financial Stability (CFS) has initiated a new Divisia monetary aggregates database, maintained within the CFS program called Advances in Monetary and Financial Measurement (AMFM) as discussed by the authors.
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The Predictive Power of the User Cost Spread for Economic Recession in China and the US

TL;DR: In this article, the authors provide a different leading recession indicator using the Chinese and US economy as comparative examples: the user cost spread, being the difference of the opportunity costs of holding government securities of different maturities.
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Compression in monetary user costs in the aftermath of the financial crisis: implications for the Divisia M4 monetary aggregate

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors show convergence in the growth rate of Divisia M4 and its simple-sum counterpart beginning in early 2009, shortly after the collapse in the Federal Funds rate.
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Testing for weak separability using stochastic semi-nonparametric tests: an empirical study on us data

TL;DR: In this article, the authors use the weak separability criterion to check for the existence of six different monetary aggregates reported by the Center of Financial Stability (CFS), and they implement an extended version of the semi-nonparametric tests introduced by Barnett and de Peretti on US monthly data.