Experts said a future rate cut would depend on the inflation trajectory, behaviour of monsoon and global factors.
"At this time when credit demand is still flat and industry is facing a demand crunch, a rate cut would have done much to restore the investment cycle.
CII is hopeful that RBI will resume the rate cutting cycle and support growth impulses in the economy in the next monetary policy," CII Director General Chandrajit Banerjee said.
"This has lowered the chance for any reduction in interest rate in the medium term. Any reversal in CPI trajectory led by good monsoon, improvement in transmission and the effect of the US Federal Reserve policy meet on the USD/Rupee will guide future measures from RBI," the Head of Research at Geojit BNP Paribas Financial Services, Vinod Nair, said.
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Motilal Oswal Financial Services CEO Motilal Oswal said
the central bank will maintain a status quo unless in the next couple of months data sharply reverses the inflation trajectory.
"While we continue to believe that there is some more scope for monetary easing, clarity on this will emerge only with incremental food inflation data, effect of monsoon on the disinflationary path of inflation, and degree of volatility from global factors," Oswal said.
He observed that the tight inflation targeting done through an institutional mechanism by the Finance Ministry should be done away with. After all, when the RBI has been mandated to target inflation of 5 per cent (CPI) by March, 2017, it is bound to be biased towards achieving that target, Kanoria stated.