In a 207-page report published today, the Washington DC-based institution also cautioned that Greece needs to make major structural reforms so its economy can grow in the long-term.
Greece's coalition government is struggling to meet staff reduction targets in the large public sector, and is due to announce details later today of its plan to suspend up to 25,000 employees on reduced pay by the end of the year. Though some will then be transferred, the government admitted that some won't find a new job and will be fired.
"The fiscal adjustment remains exceptional by any international standard," the IMF said.
The IMF described the country's privatization program as being "painfully slow" and expressed concern that mass staff transfers and firings planned in the public sector may not have the desired effect.
Poul Thomsen, the IMF's mission chief in Greece, said he was confident the recession would end soon and that eurozone countries would make good on their pledge to provide Greece with additional debt relief after Athens balances its state budget.
"I have no doubt we will see a bottoming out of recession next year, early next year. I am still confident," Thomsen said.
The IMF also predicted the bailout program would fall short of Greece's needs by USD 5.84 billion next year and by USD 8.63 billion in 2015. The IMF, describing the expected shortfall as a "test of European support," said that finance ministers from the 17 euro countries have already begun discussions on plugging financing gaps.
