The British economy, like the other major powers of the western world, lives and dies on the concept of boom and bust, and we have seen throughout the last hundred years that capitalist economics is a system that allows extreme growth and respective recession to flourish; the great depression of the 1930s was preceded by a decade of notable growth, growth in the 1980s led to 'Black Monday', and now the current downturn - which has been recorded as one of the worst slumps in decades - followed a period of grand expansion and growth.

So, from the end of world war one to the end of to the start of world war two world economies saw a boom and a bust, followed then by a boom and bust from the end of world war two to the middle of the 1980s, and from, there, we have seen another period of boom and bust that will, if the pattern is to be beleived, come back into a period of boom.

Our economic systems, then, are predicated on the knowledge that growth will lead to fall, and that means that overseas investment must in turn be predicated on investing at the right time. Now that investment is tied up in wealth and available assets, making it difficult of course to indulge in overseas investment during times of economic recession, but it is, paradoxically, the best time to invest; bust will be followed by boom, and so yields on return of investment are high indeed.

The
current economic climate is perfect for that process, and it is even more perfect - if such a term can be coined - for overseas investment; house prices in Britain accelerated massively during the 1990s, so that anyone who bought or began a mortgage on their house at the start of that housing boom and in almost all cases likely to have a substantial amount of equity, and that equity can be used to kick start a move into overseas investment.

Why, though, is overseas investment a good idea at this time? The answer is because prices in some emerging property markets are much as they were at the very beginning of that 1990s property boom in Britain, so that equity can be used to buy property for minimal amounts, but with boom expected.

To reiterate: a period of bust must in our economic system must necessarily lead to a period of economic boom. So a foray into overseas investment now would yield massive benefits when the bust is combated, and growth once again accelerates.

So overseas investment in property is a perfect way to keep your assets secure; it is not tied up in stocks and shares, but in the tangible existence of property, and, with equity often available and with prices cheap, can bring a substantial, notable, and exiting return on investment.

Look no further, then, than North Cyprus, for prime real estate in overseas investment and perfect assets for rental property and real estate; North Cyprus is the definition of real estate investing.