The central bank will on Tuesday publish the minutes from its board meeting earlier in August, when it decided to lower the cash rate to 3.6 per cent.
The decision was widely anticipated and reinforced a recent pattern at the RBA.
The board has cut interest rates at its first meeting following each of the Australian Bureau of Statistics' last three quarterly inflation read-outs.
It reflects a preference for a "cautious and gradual" easing path.
While most analysts and traders believe rates are still on a downward trajectory, expectations of another rate cut at the board's next meeting are therefore low.
Money markets assign less than a one-third chance to a cut on September 30.
Governor Michele Bullock denied the board had a set policy to avoid back-to-back cuts, insisting that it will be dependent on data that comes out before the next meeting.
"I wouldn't say one way or the other that we won't be having back-to-back cuts," she told reporters after the meeting earlier in August.
But further commentary in the minutes about the need for a gradual easing could reinforce expectations that the board won't consider cutting until at least November.
While interest rate cuts have buoyed households and businesses, insolvency data suggests the economy is still not out of the woods.
Insolvencies remained at near-record levels in July, credit reporting agency CreditorWatch reported on Tuesday.
The hardest hit industries of construction and hospitality have stabilised, but weakness is emerging in traditionally low-risk sectors like healthcare and financial and insurance services.
"The latest reduction in interest rates by the RBA will, in time, be beneficial to both consumers and businesses, however, domestic energy prices and wages continue to rise, while US trade policy is expected to slow global growth," said CreditorWatch Chief Economist Ivan Colhoun.
"This is expected to keep the level of insolvencies relatively elevated in the foreseeable future."