In the last decade, the number of Indians living in poverty has gone down from 35% to 26%. But the fact that there has been little forward movement on key development indicators has ensured that India is stuck, for the second year in a row, at its ranking of 127 (out of 177 countries) on the Human Development Index (HDI). The one message for policymakers from the UN Human Development Report 2005, released here today, couldn’t be clearer: India needs to display the level of dynamism and innovation in basic health and education as it has displayed in global technology markets. The HDI combines measures of life expectancy, school enrolment, literacy, gender equity, income, sanitation and hygiene levels, to allow a broad view of a country’s development. Despite the rank remaining static, India’s HDI value itself has moved up marginally from 0.595 to 0.602 over the last one year. What’s worrying experts is that Improvements in child and infant mortality are slowing and India is now off-track for these MDG (Millennium Development Goal) targets, said Maxine Olson, UNDP president representative and UN resident coordinator. A point echoed by Planning Commission member Abhijeet Sen who disagreed with the Government’s optimism. ‘‘Though the Indian government maintains that they are on track on the MDGs, I will go on record to say that India is not.’’