Ministers and central bank governors agreed economies were recovering from recession but it was too early to withdraw government help.
In a statement issued yesterday after two days of talks by the Group of Seven rich industrialized countries, European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet said he believed Greece would meet tough new targets to rein in its budget gap.
“We expect and we are confident that the Greek government will take all the decisions that will permit it to reach that goal,” Trichet said.
Adding her voice, French Finance Minister Christine Lagarde said euro zone countries would monitor the plan and Jean-Claude Juncker, chairman of the group of euro zone finance ministers, dismissed the idea Greece would need money from the International Monetary Fund.
Not everyone was convinced it would be that easy, however, given that Greece’s problems already have driven down debt prices of other high-deficit European countries.
World stock markets slumped to three-month lows on Friday on fear that the crisis would spread and the euro fell to its lowest level against the dollar in 8-1/2 months.
“I don’t think Trichet’s comments will help ease concerns about the euro zone. There is still no concrete plan on the Greek issue,” said Boris Schlossberg, Director of FX Research at GFT in New York.
“The other problem is that the G7 has agreed to put a tax on banks, and any type of taxation on the banking sector is going to be viewed negatively by the market. So the net result of all this is not a boost of confidence in the capital market. We may see a little more turbulence going forward. Overall, the G7 meeting, instead of reassuring the market may have simply created more angst.”
Greece, which aims to slash its budget deficit of nearly 13 percent of gross domestic product to below 3 percent in 2012, was a late entry to the G7 agenda. Earlier, ministers had expected talks to focus on efforts to reform a financial sector that is still recovering from last year’s market meltdown.