Soon it said: it is the world’s largest economy and has free trade agreements with many states.

By deeper, we are in front of a country with a highly specialized workforce, formed by a very high level of education (over 4,000 universities and colleges, among the 7 of the 10 most important universities in the world), able to professionally prepare the work on the basis of the needs of investors.

However, the same labor force is also a formidable consumer market as a population of over 310 million people and a per capita domestic product of more than US $ 47,000 translates into high internal consumption.

All this is associated with a legal system that allows extensive freedom of operation for foreign investors, whose investments enjoy open, transparent and non-discriminatory opening-ups: the United States of America and those of private foreign property are subject to a level of treatment.

It is pointless to remember that infrastructures (roads, railways, ports and airports) are among the most developed in the world.

In addition, the US residential real estate market has experienced a sharp decline, which has led to drastic fall in prices from 2006 to 2011, allowing to acquire property today even up to 70% over previous market value and a rental market in strong growth, both in terms of price and demand, as a direct consequence of what has recently happened.

If we add this to the current weakness of the dollar against the euro, the strong respect for private property in the United States and the fact that, after the crisis of recent years, the price houses have always risen, let’s first do ask “why did not I still invest in the United States?”