Greece deal: Seriously, what's holding it up?
Greek government officials are insisting that a deal with lenders over reforms is imminent, but Greece needs to implement reforms fast. · CNBC

Since coming to power at the end of January, you'd be forgiven for thinking that Greece's leftwing government had spent all of its time in talks with its international lenders.

Negotiations over the country's bailout program, reform measures and financial needs have seemingly dragged on and Greece has rarely been out of the headlines since Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras and fiery Finance Minister Yanis Varoufakis took the helm in January's election and started trying to steer Greece away from economic disaster.


Greece's euro zone counterparts have already agreed to give the country a four-month extension to its bailout program in order to allow it to make far-reaching reforms.

But the reform process has been slow with disagreements between Athens and the organizations making sure it sticks to the rules of its bailout - the European Union, European Central Bank, and International Monetary Fund -- over how far it needs to go.

CNBC explains the main sticking points between Greece and its lenders:

Disagreements over proposed reforms to Greece's pensions system and changes to its labor market have become known as "red lines" in negotiations with lenders, lines that Greece says it does not want to cross but might have to if it wants more financial aid.

Greece proposed in February reforms to "unify and streamline" its pension system, while also eliminating "loopholes and incentives that give rise to an excessive rate of early retirements throughout the economy and, more specifically, in the banking and public sectors," according to a letter from Varoufakis to lenders on Greece's reform proposals.

Lenders want Greece to make more cuts to its pension system which Greece is reluctant to do, given that it's population is already suffering under tough living conditions.

A Greek government official close to the negotiations told CNBC Thursday that although pension reform - among other issues -- were still "sticking points."

"There are sticking points on pension and labor market reforms, continuing cutbacks, unrealistic primary budget surplus targets, over-estimation of financing gaps and deficits that mean more austerity and cuts are in order, but the position of the Greek government is that without growth, we cannot do things we need to do like debt servicing," the official, who preferred not to be named due to the sensitive nature of discussions, told CNBC.

For Greece, lenders' requests that it also overhauls its labor laws - such as introducing more flexible employment contracts to make it easier to hire and fire workers -- are anathema, while for lenders they are essential if the country is to become competitive again.