Releasing the Minutes of Meeting of the Technical Advisory Committee on Monetary Policy, RBI said four of the five external Members recommended a reduction in the repo rate.
"Of these, two members suggested a reduction of 25 basis points... Two members recommended a repo rate cut of 50 basis points in the April policy," the minutes said.
In the first bi-monthly monetary policy review for 2016-17 announced on April 5, Rajan reduced the key interest rate by 0.25 per cent and introduced a host of measures to smoothen liquidity supply.
"Overall, given the likely improvement in monetary transmission, it is an opportune time to cut the repo rate by 25 bps, which would also be consistent with Reserve Bank's earlier forward guidance," the members opined.
One of these members thought there was room for more rate cuts since India's natural rate of interest had fallen due to the global demand shock.
Those who wanted a 50 bps cut believed despite pressures from the pay commission award, the government had budgeted a fiscal deficit of 3.5 per cent of GDP.
One member recommended status quo on policy rate.
"According to this member, core inflation remain elevated, inflationary expectations remain high, the price of oil has rebounded, and the fiscal consolidation numbers were not completely clear in terms of their contribution to aggregate demand," the Minutes said.
The five external members are: Shankar Acharya, Arvind Virmani, Errol D'Souza, Ashima Goyal and Chetan Ghate.
The minutes further said the members noted that the
"However, going forward, there are risks to the inflation path with inertial inflation in CPI excluding food and fuel and elevated level of services inflation. The disinflationary pass-through from low crude oil prices will also be offset by the recent nominal depreciation of the rupee, coupled with possible future increases in excise duties," was their view.
On domestic growth, Members were of the view that notwithstanding deceleration of activity in the recent period, GDP growth is still strong.
Also, divergence between the value added indicator (GVA) and the volume indicator (IIP) suggests that falling commodity prices has not led to a decline in profits.
They also highlighted that global risks were worrying as global growth is slowing.
On the external sector, implication of global developments is that recovery in the globalised corporate sector will be slow, they said and added weak corporate sector and slowing remittances are concerns that monetary policy needs to take into account.
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