Greece is set to miss yet another deadline for unlocking bailout funds this week, edging closer to a repeat of the 2015 drama that pushed Europe's most indebted state to the edge of economic collapse.

Euro-area finance ministers meeting in Brussels on Monday signalled that the government of Alexis Tsipras has yet to comply with the terms attached to the emergency loans that have kept the country afloat since 2010. While Tsipras had promised the long-delayed review of the latest bailout would be completed by Monday, a European official said last week that reaching an agreement even in April is now considered a long shot.

The Greek government, which has more than 7 billion euros ($9.7 billion) in bond payments due in July, has balked at implementing mandated reforms to its energy and labor markets while also resisting calls for additional pension cuts.

A meeting between Greek Finance Minister Euclid Tsakalotos and representatives of creditor institutions before the Brussels meeting didn't yield sufficient progress for bailout auditors to agree to return to Athens and complete the review, according to an official, who asked not to be named as negotiations aren't public.