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Both the Greek government and its creditors have said they need to reach at least an outline agreement at an April 24 meeting of euro zone finance ministers in Latvia's capital Riga.
But Athens, which has signalled it may not have enough cash to keep up payments to international creditors in May, has yet to produce a programme of reforms that is deemed acceptable.
German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble told the Council on Foreign Relations in New York April 15 that no one expected a deal at the Riga meeting or in the coming weeks.
"No one has a clue how we can reach agreement on an ambitious programme," he said, adding that Greece's new leftist-led government had "destroyed" all the economic improvements achieved by Athens since 2011.
The veteran conservative minister appeared to suggest that the euro zone could cope with a Greek default, saying markets had "priced in" all possible outcomes to Greece's debt woes and there was no contagion to other euro zone sovereign borrowers.
Standard & Poor's decision to downgrade Greece's credit rating to CCC+ with a negative outlook, citing the prolonged negotiations, suggested it sees default as increasingly likely.