"The rate cut could have been higher in the current economic conditions which would have had a stronger impact on business sentiment and spurred investment in a big way.
"Factors such as soft global commodity prices, expectations of a normal monsoon, cut in small savings rate and the government delivering on fiscal prudence in the Budget have made it the right time for the RBI to take monetary policy action and lean more towards growth," CII Director General Chandrajit Banerjee said.
"Given the kind of stress in large sectors of the economy, particularly in manufacturing, construction and infrastructure, the policy interest rate cut should have been bolder," Assocham President Sunil Kanoria said.
Given weak private investment in the face of low capacity utilisation, a reduction in the policy rate by 0.25 per cent will help strengthen growth, RBI Governor Raghuram Rajan said in the first bi-monthly monetary policy review for the 2016-17 fiscal, which began on April 1.
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"Therefore, an aggressive move to cut repo rate is needed at this juncture to facilitate industrial growth. Time is most opportune to strengthen the sentiments of industry and facilitated to grow in double digits in the coming times," Gupta said.
Rajan also took a host of measures on the liquidity front, starting with the narrowing of policy rate corridor to 0.50 per cent from the earlier 1 percentage point, which resulted in the reverse repo rate - at which banks can park excess funds with the RBI - being reset at 6 per cent.
"We now look forward to banks taking the lead in supporting the investment cycle and improving economic growth," Ficci President Harshvardhan Neotia said.
RBI also retained its GDP growth forecast at 7.6 per cent, on the assumption of a normal monsoon and a boost to consumption through the implementation of the Seventh Pay panel recommendations.