However, despite some signs of the return of political stability in Athens, the finance ministers' meeting will take place in a very different environment to that of Euro leaders last month.
The markets had cheered the October 26 package.
Since then, the fiscal contagion the package was meant to contain has already spilled over to economic heavyweight Italy.
Italian borrowing rates rose to a euro-era record high on Monday, a sign investors are losing confidence in the country's creaking finances.
The yield on Italian 10-year bonds increased to 6.64 per cent, up from 6.1 per cent a week before and dangerously close to the seven per cent that drove Ireland and Portugal into EU-IMF bailouts.
The rise came amid increased political uncertainty in Italy, with reports that Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi might soon resign.
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Anti G20 demonstrators wearing masks of Germany's Chancellor Angela Merkel (L) and France's President Nicolas Sarkozy take part in an action against globalisation in Nice.
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