WASHINGTON -- Finance ministers from the world's largest economies conveyed their determination Saturday to pursue policies that will prevent a slide into another global recession but at the same time expressed frustration that not all nations were pursuing the correct approaches.

Speaking to the policy-setting panel of the 188-nation International Monetary Fund, British Chancellor of the Exchequer George Osborne took note of the recent downgrades to global growth forecasts and said there was a need "for further progress by policymakers to deliver a strong and sustainable global recovery."

Brazil's Finance Minister, Guido Mantega, told the IMF group that the global recovery "continues to create a sense of disillusionment," and he said the IMF had demonstrated "an entrenched propensity to overstate prospects" for growth in the world's largest economies.

In his remarks, Treasury Secretary Jacob Lew pointedly complained that governments in Europe, Japan and China were failing to deliver needed support.

"European leaders should focus on recalibrating policies to address persistent demand weakness," Lew said.

The IMF panel and the steering committee of the World Bank were both scheduled to wrap up their discussions Saturday. Both groups were expected to address the growth slowdown as well as the Ebola crisis in West Africa.

Lew said Japan's outlook was uncertain with growth projected to remain weak this year and next. He said Japanese officials needed to carefully calibrate budget reductions and "move decisively to implement requisite growth-boosting structural reforms."

He said China's economy remained strong but risks had risen and the country needed to put more emphasis on consumption-led growth.

Lew did not mention Germany by name, but it was clear that his remarks on Europe focused on that nation's reluctance to do more to stimulate growth. "Countries with external surpluses and fiscal flexibility" needed to do more to boost growth, he said. Germany, Europe's largest economy, ran a large trade surplus last year.

Even some of Germany's European partners have said countries in the 18-nation eurozone should shift away from the deficit-cutting policies Germany has championed and boost investment spending to avoid being stuck in Japanese- style stagnation.

It was against that background that G-20 finance ministers and central bank presidents met for two days of talks that wrapped up Friday in advance of the IMF-World Bank meetings.

After those discussions, the ministers unveiled plans for a global initiative to build roads, ports, railways and other infrastructure projects to help boost world growth by $2 trillion over the next five years and create millions of jobs.

The Group of 20 was being led this year by Australia, which was scheduled to host a leader's summit next month in Brisbane. Australian Treasurer Joe Hockey, who chaired the finance discussions, told reporters that the plan the G-20 developed involved more than 900 individual initiatives with the potential to lift growth by 1.8 per cent over the next five years. He said details would be disclosed at the leaders' summit.

While developing the five-year plan for infrastructure projects, the G-20 financial officials were less successful in their efforts to deal with immediate threats from slowdowns in Europe, Latin America and China. The group did not issue a communique, but individual ministers said economic problems were discussed in the G-20 sessions.

"We as a group do not want to settle for mediocre growth," Canadian Finance Minister Joe Oliver told reporters after the end of the G-20 sessions. "We don't think we have to."