
Without this emergency injection, Greece is widely expected to run out of money later this month and could default. The troika is in Athens again this week and is supposed to make a final decision on the next bailout tranche by mid-October. The Greek cabinet said in a statement that the main reason it would miss the deficit target is due to a deeper-than-expected recession. 5 things you need to know about Europe's debt crisis The Greek economy is now expected to contract by 5.5% this year, according to the statement. That's worse than projections of a 3.8% decline in May. The government also hinted that the deficit could be even higher in 2011 if it is unable to successfully implement more austerity measures. 0:00 / 2:21 Euro bailout explained ... with beer pints Greece has already slashed spending, reduced wages and raised taxes in an attempt to bring its debt under control and convince the troika that it should receive all future installments from its bailout package. "We are forced to take decisions much faster than we would wish," said Prime Minister George Papandreou in an opening address to the cabinet, "due to the enormous deficit figure. That then creates recessionary problems." Papandreou said that Greece plans to stick to every detail of its bailout agreement, however unpopular. As part of the budget, Greece said it agreed to 6.6 billion euros more in deficit cutting measures for this year and 2012. However, the cabinet also said that the budget deficit in 2012 was likely to be 6.8% of GDP, higher than the troika's target of 6.5%. CNN's John Psaropoulos, Sarah Aarthun and Per Nyberg contributed to this report.