no, but I do think..and know...people confuse the two ALL the time.
The MONEY BASE is composed of currency and coins outside the banking system plus liabilities to the deposit money banks. That is money that is in circulation and it is inflationary since it consist of only the most liquid forms of money. Reserves and monetary base figures incorporate adjustments for discontinuities, or "breaks," associated with regulatory changes in reserve requirements. Seasonally adjusted, break-adjusted total reserves equal seasonally adjusted, break-adjusted required reserves plus unadjusted excess reserves.
Seasonally adjusted, break-adjusted nonborrowed reserves equal seasonally adjusted, break-adjusted total reserves less unadjusted total borrowings from the Federal Reserve. Excess reserves NSA equals unadjusted total reserves less unadjusted required reserves.
The seasonally adjusted, break-adjusted monetary base consists of seasonally adjusted, break-adjusted total reserves plus the seasonally adjusted currency component of the money stock plus vault cash exceeds their required reserves, the seasonally adjusted, break-adjusted difference between current vault cash and the amount applied to satisfy current reserve requirements.
This race between the deleveraging and the injection of vast amounts of "money" will come to an end. When this delveraging tapers off there will be a lull that will lead people to think this is finally all over, then the highly inflationary policies of recent months will present itself in the form of rapidly rising prices to the point that we will all wish for deflation again.