The International Monetary Fund and the 19-nation single currency area are battling over how much debt relief Greece needs, and over economic targets required of Athens that the IMF says are not realistic.
"The window of opportunity is still open, but will soon shut because there are elections coming," said French Finance Minister Michel Sapin yesterday after unsuccessful talks on Greece with his eurozone counterparts.
In addition by the summer "Greece faces important debt repayments, so we have to find a solution before then," Sapin said, with bailout cash blocked until a solution is found.
A eurozone official told AFP on condition of anonymity that progress in the talks remained haltingly slow, with a break in the impasse unlikely even in February.
The IMF, headed by Christine Lagarde, refuses to lend further to Greece without significant changes to the austerity requirements demanded of the government or further guarantees from Athens.
Eurogroup head Jeroen Dijsselbloem insisted that the IMF remained committed to the Greek bailout programme, but that its demands were indeed strict.
Powerful Germany, Greece's biggest creditor, says that Athens is up to the task of meeting the targets without further debt relief and has called on the Greek government to deliver on reforms.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content
