The trend in job market remained muted due to uncertainty regarding the sustainability of the upturn in demand.
The Nikkei India Services Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI), which tracks changes in activity at services sector companies on a monthly basis, stood at 54.7 in August, up from 51.9 in July. This marks an uptrend for 14th straight month.
A reading above 50 means the sector is expanding, while a reading below that level means contraction.
The level of incoming new work rose at the quickest pace in three-and-a-half years and companies mainly linked this to improved market conditions.
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Meanwhile, the trend in employment remained comparatively subdued, however, with a slight decrease in jobs signalled for the first time since September last year.
Stronger business activity growth and incoming new work led to modest recovery in optimism at service providers. Over 27 per cent of companies expect activity to increase over the coming year.
"Healthy levels of confidence were also signalled, with firms expecting greater client interest and improved market conditions to underpin output growth in the year ahead. All-in-all, PMI data suggest that the service sector looks set to maintain its strong performance in the months ahead," Lima said.
The easing of inflationary pressures leaves room for rate cut by RBI, which is scheduled to hold its next monetary policy review -- probably the first by a new committee being set up -- on October 4. It would also be the first review under the new RBI Governor Urjit Patel, who has assumed charge effective September 4 after end of his predecessor Raghuram Rajan's three-year tenure.
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