India is a country that has embraced the SDGs as an operational framework, more than any country that I've seen. India was the first country to introduce sub-national SDG index, known as the India SDG index. So the United Nations system here is very privileged to work with government, with NITI Aayog, state governments and ministries on this SDG localization.
With Ministry of Statistics and Program Implementation (MOSPI) dashboard and the National Indicators Framework, our different agencies are working at state level. We have UNDPs working with states on SDG coordination centers, acceleration centers, we have UNICEF, UNHABITAT at all levels - the center and the state, responding to this great appetite and leadership from India in terms of applying SDGs to this cooperative federalism type of model. According to the SDG index, we've seen very significant progress across the board, across the 17 SDGs, there are 16 being tracked in the SDG index. Out of 100, we see a sort of perfect score from 66 to over 70 as well, so we see very important progress.
Additionally, there's a Multidimensional Poverty Index that NITI Aayog is leading. However, we do see that the challenges remain, just as in any country. In India the areas most in need of investment and acceleration, are SDG 5, which is gender equality and SDG 2 looking at nutrition. That's where we need to work together for really maximum acceleration across the board.
But of course, there's not a country in the world that's achieved the SDGs, we still have about five years left until 2030 and a lot of reason to be optimistic, but a lot of work left to be done.