Greece will hold a second election on June 17 after coalition talks failed following its May 6 elections.
Monti's comment came after figures showed manufacturing shrank across Europe, German business confidence dimmed, and the UK economy shrank a bigger than-expected 0.3 per cent in the first three months of the year.
"The economic data just proves the world's economy is slowing down and any recovery is fragile," Ive said.
The New Zealand dollar showed little changed yesterday after Finance Minister Bill
English announced his fourth budget. The National government's 'zero' budget plans to get the nation's books back in the black by 2015.
"The market reaction was fairly muted, the main reaction came from the rating agencies," Ive said.
Rating agency S&P affirmed New Zealand's AA foreign currency rating, and kept the outlook on stable, saying the budget is the "latest incremental step toward consolidating the government's fiscal settings after four years of deficits" from the country's recession and costs relating to the Canterbury earthquakes.
There is no significant data set for release in New Zealand today.
The New Zealand dollar rose to 60 euro cents from 59.73 cents yesterday and increased to 48 British pence from 47.90. The kiwi increased to 59.91 yen from 58.73 yen and was unchanged on 77.08 Australian cents.