A new US-led Pacific trade pact that pointedly excludes China could see it lose influence and key export markets, but observers say the web of bilateral deals Beijing has forged is enough to maintain its global clout. The signing last week of the Trans-Pacific Partnership brings together 12 nations that account for about 40 per cent of the global economy and would mark the biggest liberalisation of world trade in more than a decade. And while all signatories championed the benefits it will bring and its importance in kickstarting sluggish global growth, the agreement also provides a strategic bulwark to China’s growing power — both economically and militarily. In heralding the agreement US president Barack Obama said: ‘We can’t let countries like China write the rules of the global economy.’ And Chinese state-media this week labelled it ‘a massive economic bloc accused of combating China’. However, Chinese officials have softened their stance towards the pact after initially giving it a frosty reception. Beijing’s commerce ministry this week called it ‘important’ and said China is ‘open to any mechanism that follows the rules of the World Trade Organisation and can boost the economic integration of the Asia-Pacific’. The remarks have prompted speculation that China could actually apply to join, although most analysts consider that unlikely, citing the high level of state control over the economy. The deal comes just months after Washington and Tokyo were left isolated when most of their Western allies agreed to join China’s much-vaunted Asian infrastructure bank, set up as a counter to the US-influenced World Bank and International Monetary Fund. At the same time Beijing continues to ramp up its military might, slowly eating into Washington’s sphere of influence in the Pacific while it increasingly flexes its muscles in territorial disputes with Japan and South Korea, among others. Some argue the deal could hammer Chinese manufacturers — already struggling with slowing growth in the world’s number-two economy — by cutting off key export markets. Ma Jun, chief economist at the research institute of China’s central bank warned in an article this week that the textiles, clothing and electronics industries will miss out significantly. And a study in 2014 by two US academics and a Chinese researcher estimated Beijing could lose out on a potential $1.6 trillion boost to its exports by 2025 by not signing up. China and the US would be ‘the countries expected to benefit the most’ from a widened TPP, they wrote. Beijing’s exclusion ‘obviously isn’t conducive to promoting economic cooperation between China and neighbouring countries’, said Chun Jiangyue, director of a think-tank affiliated to China’s foreign ministry. But China’s response has been measured, underlining what many see as confidence in cementing its own economic deals in the Pacific. ‘We have nothing to be insecure about,’ the state-run Global Times newspaper said this week. Of the many free-trade agreements China has signed globally, five are with TPP members — including Australia and New Zealand — and as the largest economy in Asia, it is the biggest trading partner of many others.