The business and economics research arm of consultancy major McKinsey & Company also said India's human development indicators show that deprivation extends well beyond the 22 per cent of Indians who live below the official poverty line.
"The path of inclusive reforms envisages a far more positive alternative, one in which the nation takes steps to stimulate investment, job creation and farm production, as well as dramatically improve the delivery of basic services. These reforms could potentially allow India to achieve an average GDP growth rate of 7.8 per cent between 2012 and 2022.
According to MGI, the 'empowerment line' is "a new and more holistic measure of income deprivation."
It is an estimate of the minimum economic cost for a household to fulfil eight basic needs: food, energy, housing, drinking water, sanitation, health care, education and social security.
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The report noted that the higher GDP growth inherent in the inclusive reforms scenario generates more tax revenue that can be ploughed back into spending for basic services.
The combination of higher investment, faster economic growth and increased tax revenue could allow India to bring its fiscal deficit to 6 per cent of GDP from 2017 onward.
The report says 40 per cent of India's children under the age of 3 suffer from malnutrition and 50 per cent of its households have no access to improved sanitation facilities.