China's fixed-asset investment has risen 1.7 percent year on year in the first quarter of 2026, reversing the 3.8-percent decline recorded for the whole of last year, official data showed Thursday.
The investment totaled 10.27 trillion yuan (about 1.5 trillion U.S. dollars) during this period, the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) said in a statement.
Investment in infrastructure construction grew 8.9 percent from a year ago during the period, and manufacturing investment increased 4.1 percent, according to the NBS.
Excluding the property sector, the country's fixed-asset investment rose 4.8 percent in the first three months. Investment in property development fell 11.2 percent year on year during the period.
"Investment in high-tech industries grew by 7.4 percent year on year. Specifically, investment in computer and office devices manufacturing rose by 28.3 percent; investment in aerospace vehicle and equipment manufacturing increased by 19 percent; and investment in information services went up by 20.9 percent. In March, fixed-asset investment (excluding rural households) edged up by 0.52 percent month on month," said Mao Shengyong, deputy head of the NBS, at a press conference in Beijing.
China's fixed-asset investment rises 1.7 pct in Q1 2026
The U.S. embargo against Cuba is violating fundamental rights and worsening shortages of food and medicine, Aleida Guevara, daughter of revolutionary leader Ernesto "Che" Guevara, said Monday in an interview.
Her comments came on the sidelines of an international solidarity conference in Berlin, where activists warned that the United States' decades-long blockade has shifted from a political tool to a humanitarian crisis, cutting off basic supplies and isolating Cuba from global trade.
"The blockade is one of the worst things that a country can experience, causing years of severe suffering for the Cuban people. The embargo should not affect food and medicine, but it hit those basic needs first -- food and medicine for the people. So for many years, we have faced constant shortages of supplies," she said.
Guevara, a pediatrician at a Havana children’s hospital, said U.S. sanctions prevent pharmaceutical companies from selling medicines to Cuba, directly harming public health. She added that Washington’s measures, imposed in the name of democracy and human rights, have instead created a humanitarian crisis.
"It is unacceptable that the U.S. is trying to prevent other countries in the world from engaging in free trade with Cuba. This is damaging every aspect of our lives. People's lives are affected. Food, medicine, and transportation -- everything is impacted," she said.
The embargo dates back more than half a century. Rooted in the Trading with the Enemy Act of World War I, it was formally codified when President John F. Kennedy signed an executive order in 1962, launching an economic, commercial and financial blockade that has survived 11 successive U.S. administrations.
Today, Cuba is enduring one of its worst economic crises since the 1990s. The island has suffered three nationwide blackouts in March, while gasoline shortages have crippled hospitals, slashed public transport, and strained essential services. Since January, the Trump administration has imposed new oil restrictions and repeatedly issued military threats, further tightening pressure on Havana.
Aleida Guevara’s comments carry symbolic weight given her father’s legacy. Born in Argentina in 1928, Ernesto "Che" Guevara trained as a doctor before joining Fidel Castro’s insurgency in 1956 to overthrow Cuban dictator Fulgencio Batista. After playing a leading role in the rebel victory, he left Cuba to pursue revolutionary struggles abroad, eventually being killed in Bolivia in 1967.
Guevara's daughter warns US embargo deepening Cuba’s humanitarian crisis
Guevara's daughter warns US embargo deepening Cuba’s humanitarian crisis