The Greek program and progress made towards achieving implementation of all 15 “prior agreements” will top the agenda of Monday’s Eurogroup meeting in Brussels. According to a press release, institutional creditors’ representatives will brief Eurozone finance ministers on course of the Greek state’s outstanding payments towards third parties, primarily contractors and suppliers.
A successful completion of the prior actions, the Eurogroup said, will also free up a 2.8-billion-euro sub-tranche of bailout loans, something that has been repeatedly emphasized by creditors since late May 2016.
The last remaining measures that Athens must implement include privatizations, liberalization of the energy market, systemic banks’ governance and making the public revenue authority independent.