Several financial sector reform programs were prepared within a few months after the Lehman Brothers failure. These programs were supported by national policymakers, including the community of bank supervisors. The programs--national and international--covered some or all of the following nine areas:
(1) to strengthen the stability and robustness of financial firms, "with particular emphasis on standards for governance, risk management, capital and liquidity"
(2) to strengthen the quality and effectiveness of prudential regulation and supervision;
(3) to build the capacity for undertaking effective macroprudential regulation and supervision;
(4) to develop suitable resolution regimes for financial institutions;
(5) to strengthen the infrastructure of financial markets, including markets for derivative transactions;
(6) to improve compensation practices in financial institutions;
(7) to strengthen international coordination of regulation and supervision, particularly with regard to the regulation and resolution of global systemically important financial institutions, later known as G-SIFIs;
(8) to find appropriate ways of dealing with the shadow banking system; and
(9) to improve the performance of credit rating agencies, which were deeply involved in the collapse of markets for collateralized and securitized lending instruments, especially those based on mortgage finance.