Trump urges India to relax trade barriers

US President Donald Trump and India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi have dined together in the White House where they discussed balancing the trade deficit.

US President Donald Trump (R) and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi

US President Donald has urged India's prime minister to do more to relax Indian trade barriers. (AAP)

US President Donald Trump has urged Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi to do more to relax Indian trade barriers during talks in which both leaders took great pains to stress the importance of a strong US-Indian relationship.

At a closely watched first meeting between the two on Monday, Trump and Modi appeared to get along well. Modi pulled in Trump for a bear hug on the stage as the cameras rolled in the Rose Garden.

"I deeply appreciate your strong commitment to the enhancement of our bilateral relations," Modi told him. "I am sure that under your leadership a mutually beneficial strategic partnership will gain new strength, new positivity and will reach new heights."

Trump was also warm but made clear he sees a need for more balance in the US-India trade relationship in keeping with his campaign promise to expand American exports and create more jobs at home. Last year the US trade deficit with India neared $US31 billion ($A41 billion).

Trump said he would like a trading relationship that is "fair and reciprocal."

"It is important that barriers be removed to the export of US goods into your markets and that we reduce our trade deficit with your country," he said.

Trump said he was pleased about an Indian airline's recent order of 100 new American planes and that the US looked forward to exporting more energy, including major long-term contracts to purchase American natural gas.

These energy contracts "are being negotiated and we will sign - trying to get the price up a little bit," Trump said.

Modi came to Washington looking to revitalise a relationship that thrived under former President Barack Obama but has appeared to flag as Trump courted India's rival China in an effort to persuade Beijing to do more to rein in North Korea.

Modi effusively praised Trump, hailing his "vast and successful experience in the business world" and "great leadership" for US-India ties, which he said should "lend an aggressive and forward looking agenda to our relations."

He said he had invited Trump to India but no time was given for a visit.



Modi harked back to Trump's "Make America Great Again" campaign slogan to stress that his agenda for his country was little different than Trump's.

"I am sure that the convergence of my vision for "New India" and President Trump's vision for making America great again will add new dimensions to our cooperation," he said.

Trump and Modi had a working dinner on Monday night, the first time Trump has played host to a foreign dignitary at a White House dinner.

Trump administration officials have pointed to both leaders' impact on social media - each has more than 30 million Twitter followers - as proof they are cut from the same cloth.

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Source: AAP


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