Great post, sums things up really well. If the State got its act together and planning and infrastructure didn't take so many years then the profit margin would probably double. At the moment it's 15% (or 8% as you pointed out) over 10 years. With a delivery time of 5 years that mezzanine finance isn't costing €30k-€50k per unit , or more, so the net margin would be 20% over 5 years, not 15% over 10 years.
planning needs to move from a permissive system to a presumptive system.
Very many rural houses have no public water or sewage, and even in the towns and cities sewage and water were an afterthought for a lot of the older ones. Including much of Dublin's core- according to the internet Stephen's Green (for example) predates Dublin's sewage system. Many towns around the country were essentially built by the local landlord to serve their estates, when piped water and sewage wasn't even a dream on this island.If those houses are served by roads, connected to sewage, have a public water supply, etc, yes, absolutely there was central planning involved.
Immigration accounts for 20% of the population.
"Immigrants" also includes Irish citizens returning from abroad to live back in Ireland.The number of non-Irish citizens increased in 2022, accounting for 12% of the population.
20% of the people who reside in this country were born in a foreign country. Many immigrants are Irish citizens."Immigrants" also includes Irish citizens returning from abroad to live back in Ireland.
The problem is we Irish born are very slow in accepting there is a taxpayers cost involved in bedding them into our country,n my view that is a good thing
The vast majority are working and paying tax. One in three jobs in the "Silicone Docks" is filled by an foreign born person. They are more likely to be working age than the Irish born population and so improve the dependency ratio.The problem is we Irish born are very slow in accepting there is a taxpayers cost involved in bedding them into our country,
The real problem in my view is that we are awful at long term planning and implentation. Between censuses (censii??) 2006 and 2011 the population increase by 340k (from 4.24 million to 4.58 million), a period that covered the crash and an awful lot of outward migration. That's over 100k homes at average household sizes. A clear and obvious demand for 20k new homes a year when things were at their worst in terms of housing demand. And the government responded to this with...nothing....actually much worse than nothing: they started planning to demolish existing homes: https://www.bbc.com/news/world-euro... announced,property bust and financial crisis.The problem is we Irish born are very slow in accepting there is a taxpayers cost involved in bedding them into our country,
In a situation where significant areas of the country cannot accommodate new housing development because of creaking water infrastructure, inward migration to those areas (from within Ireland as well as from elsewhere) is becoming increasingly unsustainable.At a macro level there is no economic argument against immigration
Sure, but the solution there is to fix the infrastructure.In a situation where significant areas of the country cannot accommodate new housing development because of creaking water infrastructure, inward migration to those areas (from within Ireland as well as from elsewhere) is becoming increasingly unsustainable.
That won't be done in a hurry. Where I am today it's been a pressing problem for 15 years now.Sure, but the solution there is to fix the infrastructure
Basically everything becomes a problem once critical national and local infrastructure provision falls asunder.The problem is the State sector, not the immigrants.
I agree, but immigrants are not making it worse.That won't be done in a hurry. Where I am today it's been a pressing problem for 15 years now.
Okay, I should have said that the problem is caused by the State Sector.Basically everything becomes a problem once critical national and local infrastructure provision falls asunder.
Are they making it less of a problem, or are they making no difference?immigrants are not making it worse
Many of them are working in construction and on infrastructure. Without them the modest improvements in infrastructure would be more modest.Are they making it less or a problem, or are they making no difference?
A working person who lived in Cavan and moved to Galway is already working in Ireland. They are not changing the overall national economic picture.If the answer to either question is no, please explain how, as a person who moves from rural Cavan to Galway is demonstrably adding to the spectacularly bad housing shortage in Galway, which is considerably worse than the situation pertaining in rural Cavan.
We're not talking about the overall national economic picture though. We're talking about a chronic housing shortage that is considerably worse in some areas than in others.They are not changing the overall national economic picture.
It's all linked.We're not talking about the overall national economic picture though. We're talking about a chronic housing shortage that is considerably worse in some areas than in others.
That's illogical.A guy who moves to Galway to build houses is of course adding to Galway's housing shortage.
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