A standoff between the eurozone and the International Monetary Fund has dragged on for months, raising fears of a new debt crisis and sparking fresh talk of Greece tumbling out of the euro.
The fund and the 19-nation single currency area are battling over how much debt relief Greece needs, and over economic targets required of Athens as part of a third massive bailout, agreed in 2015.
"We continue to believe that the commitments reached for the programme are both credible and ambitious," said Annika Breidthardt, a spokeswoman for the European Commission, the EU's executive arm which monitors the bailout for the eurozone, along with the IMF and the ESM bailout fund.
A breakthrough is key, with Athens at risk of hitting a financial wall this summer when it must repay nearly 7.0 billion euros it cannot afford without new bailout funds.
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The IMF yesterday said that a majority of its board felt strongly that Greece could not be subject to more austerity, even though this is demanded by Germany.
"Most directors agreed that Greece does not require further fiscal consolidation at this time," a statement by the IMF said after the fund held a board meeting to discuss the country in Washington.
The feuding has spooked investors with Greece's two year borrowing rates soaring to near 10 per cent on the financial markets.
To ease tensions, the IMF reluctantly said in December it could go along with the tighter budget targets, but only if Athens passes new austerity laws in case the targets are missed.
But the Greek government today criticised these demands as "illogical", even though it supports calls by the IMF for more debt relief.
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