FILE PHOTO: An ibis bird perches next to the Reserve Bank of Australia headquarters in central Sydney, Australia February 6, 2018. REUTERS/Daniel Munoz/File Photo

SYDNEY, Aug 26 (Reuters) - Australia's central bank board judged further policy easing would likely be needed over the coming year when it cut rates this month, and the pace could be gradual or quicker depending on the flow of economic data.

Minutes of its August 11-12 policy meeting showed the Reserve Bank of Australia saw a strong case for a quarter-point reduction in the cash rate to 3.6% as data had shown inflation was heading towards the mid-point of its 2-3% target band.

They also discussed the policy strategy over the coming year, adding that preserving full employment and maintaing low and stable inflation was likely to require some further cuts in the cash rate.

The board saw arguments for a gradual pace of easing and for a quicker series of moves, with the outcome uncertain as yet.

"It was important for the pace of decline in the cash rate to be determined by incoming data on a meeting-by-meeting basis," the minutes showed.

The central bank has tended to emphasize caution in easing, having only cut rates in February, May and August following the release of quarterly inflation data.

A gradual pace in policy easing may be waranteed as the labour market remained somewhat tight, private demand was showing signs of picking up and there was much uncertainty about where the neutral rate was.

A faster pace could be needed if the labour market weakened and there was a risk inflation might undershoot the midpoint of the 2-3% target range. A global slowdown or renewed strains from U.S. tariff policy might also add to the case for quicker easing.

Investors are wagering the RBA will skip a move in September and wait until its November meeting to ease to 3.35%. Rates are seen settling around 3.10%, or perhaps as low as 2.85%.

Headline inflation eased to 2.1% in the June quarter, while the trimmed mean measure of core inflation hit a fresh three-year low of 2.7%. The labour market, on the other hand, is easing from full employment levels although at a gradual pace.

Employment rebounded in July and the jobless rate edged down from a 3-1/2 year high, calming concerns the labour market was about to fall over.

The RBA said board members discussed whether the central bank should increase the pace at which its holdings of government bonds were running down, but they decided there should be no change to its current strategy of letting them mature.

(Reporting by Stella Qiu; editing by Wayne Cole)

((yifan.qiu@thomsonreuters.com; +61 0 427901124;))

Keywords: AUSTRALIA RBA/MINUTES