(Reuters) -
Greece and its international lenders will miss a self-imposed March 10 deadline
to clinch a deal that will release the next tranche of the country's rescue
loans, three senior Greek government sources said late on Friday.
Greece and
representatives of the European Union (EU) and the International Monetary Fund
(IMF) had hoped to conclude the latest review of the country's reform progress under
the terms of its international bailout by Monday, when euro zone finance
ministers meet in Brussels.
But the
talks will not be over by then because the two sides are still at odds over a
range of issues, mainly on structural measures to boost the economy's
competitiveness and over Greek lenders' capital needs.
"The
distance between us has narrowed but we will still have work to do next
week," one Greek senior government official told reporters after a new
round of talks with lenders.
Greece's
ongoing review has been dragging on since September, making it the longest ever
since the country's 237-billion euro bailout began in 2010.
Austerity-weary
Athens has become increasingly defiant towards its lenders, who on their part
are pushing for reforms as the bailout is nearing its end. Greece has already
obtained 218 billion euros of rescue loans but may need further funds to stay
afloat.
Another two
senior finance ministry officials said that the heads of the EU/IMF mission
will return to Athens shortly after Monday's finance ministers' meeting, with a
view to clinch the deal by the end of March.
Greece has
no pressing funding needs before May, when 9.3 billion euros of its bonds
expire, the biggest refinancing hump the country will face in the next three
decades.
"We're
on a very good road for an agreement," one of the two finance ministry
officials said. Greece is hoping to get euro zone finance ministers on Monday
to make a statement that the talks have made good progress.
To ease the
talks' completion, Greece has proposed removing the thorny issue of banks from
the current talks. One of the officials said he was optimistic that the issue
would not block a deal.
"I am
confident it will not be a problem for the review," the official said. The
EU/IMF believe that Greek banks' have higher capital needs than a 6.4 billion
euro estimate announced by Greece's central bank on Thursday.
(Reporting
by Lefteris Papadimas and Harry Papachristou)
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