Greece's EU-IMF creditors are returning to Athens today to seek a deal to break the months- long deadlock on its bailout, the European Commission said.
Athens on April 7 accepted in principle a tough set of new reform and tax measures in return for fresh cash to avert a possible debt default in July.
So-called bailout monitors had left Athens without a deal in March.
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"Talks are to begin tomorrow and are expected to last several days," Schinas said.
Greece and its creditors agreed a third, 86-billion-euros bailout deal in July 2015.
But the International Monetary Fund has so far refused to take part this time on the grounds that the targets were unrealistic and Athens' debt mountain unsustainable.
A senior IMF official said on Friday that it was "urgent" to reach a new agreement on the bailout programme, the latest payment of which has been held up by the row between Greece and its creditors.
Meanwhile, Brussels congratulated Greece for the 2016 primary surplus -- or budget surplus before debt repayments -- it registered in 2016, a key announcement for the reform talks.
The EU's statistics agency Eurostat said Greece had a primary surplus of 4.2 per cent last year. Athens itself had announced a figure of 3.9 per cent.
Under the bailout, Greece needed to clock a primary surplus of 0.5 per cent of output in 2016, followed by 1.75 per cent this year and 3.5 per cent in 2018.
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