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11 February 2015

FSB Chair's letter to G20 on financial reforms – Finishing the post-crisis agenda and moving forward


The letter from the FSB Chair to G20 Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors sets out the FSB’s work programme to advance these goals during the Turkish G20 Presidency in 2015.

In Brisbane, G20 Leaders welcomed the progress made in completing measures to fix the fault lines that caused the crisis The priorities for the FSB’s work in the next phase of reform were agreed, namely:

  • Full, consistent and prompt implementation of agreed reforms: The FSB supports the determined efforts of its members through enhanced monitoring of implementation across all jurisdictions, regularly report its key findings to the G20. This year the FSB will publish its first annual report on the implementation of the reforms and their effects

  • Finalising the design of remaining post-crisis reforms: Further work on the design of reforms is needed in three areas: completion of the capital framework for banks; measures to help end too big to fail; and initiatives to make derivatives markets safer

  • Addressing new risks and vulnerabilities: Closing data gaps and sharing analysis and policy choices will be vital to allow national authorities to understand and react to risks effectively and promptly. In addition, the FSB will focus on co-ordinating efforts to address two specific emerging vulnerabilities: market-based finance and misconduct 

“The scale of misconduct in some financial institutions has risen to a level that has the potential to create systemic risks. Fundamentally, it threatens to undermine trust in financial institutions and markets, thereby limiting some of the hard-won benefits of the initial reforms,” the letter says. “Recent experience suggests that the implications could be far-reaching, including withdrawal from correspondent banking facilities, which reduces financial inclusion. Enforcement must remain a credible deterrent to misconduct and the FSB will consider the extent to which enhanced co-operation between conduct supervisors and greater consistency in the application of conduct regulations across jurisdictions can improve its effectiveness. We will also examine the extent of withdrawal of correspondent banking facilities and possible remedies.”

Full press release

Full letter



© FSB - Financial Stability Board


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