"It will be done at the latest by Monday," government spokesman
Gabriel Sakellaridis told Mega TV.
Greece's left-wing government and its euro zone creditors agreed
last week that Athens would come up with a list of its own reforms,
which must achieve a similar budget impact to measures agreed by the
previous conservative-led administration.
Athens is rushing to get the list ready before state coffers run
empty, which is expected to happen in a few weeks without more aid.
Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras met with German Chancellor
Angela Merkel in Berlin on Monday but Sakellaridis said the two only
discussed the outline of the reforms without going into depth.
"I believe points of convergence were found," he said.
The reforms are a deeply politically sensitive issue for Tsipras,
who stormed to power pledging to end austerity policies before being
forced to accept an extension to a hated bailout program under the
threat of a banking collapse.
Sakellaridis said the package of reforms Athens will propose would
not contain recessionary measures but structural changes.
If Greece's creditors agree that the substitute reforms can achieve
an impact equivalent to previously agreed measures, Athens would get
more loans from the euro zone and the International Monetary Fund,
averting bankruptcy.
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On Tuesday, newspaper Kathimerini said Athens would ask the European
Financial Stability Facility (EFSF) to hand it back 1.2 billion
euros out of 10.9 billion euros of mostly EFSF bonds its bank rescue
fund returned last month.
It said Athens believes the rescue fund should have returned only
9.7 billion euros of its remaining cushion as the remaining amount
was cash rather than EFSF bonds.
The fund returned the sum to the EFSF last month as part of a Feb.
20 Eurogroup agreement that extended Greece's bailout by four
months.
(Reporting by George Georgiopoulos and Angeliki Koutantou, editing
by Deepa Babington and John Stonestreet)
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