The July-September CAD is lower than USD 8.5 billion, or 1.7 per cent of GDP, in the same quarter of last fiscal.
It is, however, higher than USD 0.3 billion or 0.1 per cent recorded in the first quarter of the current fiscal.
According to RBI data, private transfer receipts, mainly representing remittances by Indians employed overseas, amounted to USD 15.2 billion, registering a decline by 10.7 per cent from the previous level a year ago.
Net services receipts moderated on annual basis, primarily owing to the fall in earnings from software, financial services and charges for intellectual property rights, it said.
"In the financial account, net inflows of both foreign direct investment and portfolio investment were significantly higher in the second quarter," it said.
Non-resident Indian (NRI) deposits also witnessed a 50 per cent decline to USD 2.1 billion from USD 4.2 billion in the same quarter of the previous fiscal.
India's trade deficit narrowed to USD 49.5 billion in the first half from USD 71.6 billion in the same period previous fiscal.
Net FDI inflows during 6 months rose by more than 28.8 per cent over the level during the corresponding period of the previous year, it said, adding, portfolio investment recorded a net inflow of USD 8.2 billion as against a net outflow of USD 3.5 billion a year ago.
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