The Basel Committee on Banking Supervision has completed a review of the implementation of new risk-based capital standards adopted in the wake of the financial crisis as part of the global capital adequacy regime known as Basel III.

Specifically, the committee published implementation review reports on Friday on Japan, Indonesia, and Singapore, which evaluated the implementation of the new bank capital standards in those countries. With these latest reports, the committee has now reviewed the implementation status of all of its members.

“This is an important milestone in the committee’s efforts to ensure full, timely and consistent implementation of Basel standards, which is critical to improving the resilience of the global banking system,” says Stefan Ingves, chairman of the Basel Committee and governor of Sveriges Riksbank, in statement.

During these assessments, the committee found more than 1,000 deviations from the standards and most were corrected during the assessments. The deadline for full implementation of all of the new requirements is 2019.

In the reports issued on Friday, the reviews found that the capital regimes of Japan and Singapore are “compliant” with the Basel Committee’s framework and Indonesia’s capital framework is “largely compliant.”

In the year ahead, the committee will be completing its assessments of the implementation of new liquidity standards that were introduced as part of the Basel III framework. It aims to have those assessments completed by December 2017.