"We are assuming that the election will produce a stable government, which can then take up some of these reforms in a steady fashion, following formation of new government.
"This in turn would help put the economy back onto a firm footing and lay foundations for stronger growth ahead...It is in this context that we think the outcome of general elections in India will be the key to determining the pace at which these productivity-boosting reforms are implemented," it said.
In its report titled 'India Economics: Five Key Reforms to Fix India's Growth Problem', it said: "We think the new government will need to implement these to move out of the current stagflation type environment and accelerate GDP growth in a sustainable manner towards 7-8 per cent.
India's fiscal deficit remains significantly higher even compared to the US, which was the epicentre of the credit crisis, it said.
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In the second stage, with the growth recovery and improvement in tax revenues, expenditure growth needs to be maintained at a lower level to bring down fiscal deficit.
Improvement in business environment is required as policy uncertainty, corruption-related investigations, and regulatory hurdles have deteriorated business environment and held back investment cycle.
"...Government has taken steps (such as liberalising FDI limits, setting up of Cabinet Committee on Investment), yet the overall business environment still remains challenging."
It said urbanisation policy need a rethink as focus on redistribution and development of rural areas has resulted in disincentivising urbanisation.