“progress” in the negotiations, but “results are still insufficient so far,” Sapin said.
The meeting´s host, German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble, also sought to play down assertions by Athens that Greece is on the verge of reaching a deal with its creditors.
“The positive reports out of Athens don´t fully reflect the state of talks,” Schaeuble said.
The Greek government has sent mixed signals about how close the two sides are to a deal. On the one hand it has suggested that an agreement could be reached by Sunday.
But Finance Minister Yanis Varoufakis told VimaFM radio on Friday that while a deal was close, under a February agreement “the country´s aid programme was prolonged until June 30, thus that is the date by which we need to arrive at a deal.”
If Varoufakis sees the end of June as the ultimate deadline for a deal, this would offer Athens and its creditors a longer timeframe to conclude their talks than next week, when Greek officials have said they may not have enough money to make a repayment to the IMF.
The governor of the Bank of Japan Haruhiko Kuroda warned of the consequences of a possible “Grexit”.
“If for the first time a country leaves the Eurozone, then it won´t be the same stable monetary union as before,” Kuroda told the German business daily Handelsblatt.
In fact, the euro area would then simply resemble a system of fixed exchange rates and such systems had never proven particularly successful in the past, the central bank chief said.
Among the official topics on the G7 agenda were the state of the global economy, financial regulation, fighting tax evasion and ways of starving jihadist groups like the Islamic State of funding.
The Chinese currency, the yuan or renminbi, also featured in discussions, as Beijing continues to push for it to play a greater role in the world financial system.
It wants the yuan to be included in the basket that makes up the IMF´s own “special drawing rights” reserve currency.
Meeting host Schaueble said there was fundamental agreement that this should be the case, but he added that “there are technical issues and not just technical ones” to sort out first.
“It would not be good to rush it,” he said.
Schaeuble also said the G7 countries were prepared to make further financial aid available to Nepal in the wake of the recent devastating earthquakes there.
And the head of the German central bank or Bundesbank, Jens Weidmann, said the G7 was pushing for a “code of conduct” for banking professionals following a wave of scandals such as the rigging of interest rates and foreign currency markets.