That's a lot of high value jobs and the associated tax revenues going elsewhere. We already have a labour shortage, particularly in areas where the job is actually hard like construction and care workers. Without immigrants that problem will get far worse.That could mean migration into Ireland falling from 33,700 in 2019 to just 5,000 a year
28,000 arrived in 2022. That's according to the CSO. Data for my post here.By December 2022 67,000 Ukrainians had arrived in Ireland - not 28,000 - with almost all of them having to be accommodated by the State.
The very least we should be doing for Ukraine is taking in their refugees.(The final number reached 112,000 with 75% of them still here.) There were ambitious plans to build modular homes all over the country but as we know, the original costs more than doubled and the construction timelines were way off kilter to say the least. The State simply didn't have the resources to cope with this kind of influx in any other way than an ad-hoc, emergency basis. (And they're still moving Ukrainians around the country due to hotel contracts ending, taking children out of school during term-time, causing understandable distress. The Government simply doesn't have a lot of other options.)
The increase from migration in 2022 was 60,100, an 88,800 net increase of whom 27,700 was the net natural increase (births less deaths).And that was just one cohort. The overall immigration numbers have rocketed since 2022 - increasing every year (total for 2024 was almost 150,000 - with net migration around 80,000.)
Given that we have very high levels of social transfers in this country the same rationale could be used to say that about 70% of the population are being subsidised by welfare since only the top 30% off earners are net contributors to the exchequer.Yes, many/most are bringing much needed skills, have high paying jobs etc., but all need somewhere to live. Have noticed Indians in particular in high numbers at new housing developments lining up to put down deposits - and good luck to them. (For some reason wealthy Chinese are buying mainly largish second-hand houses in mature estates in my area.) But not all immigrants are equal in terms of the demands made on the state's resources. It's quite clear for example that the Asylum System is being openly used as a form of heavily subsidized accommodation for low-skilled labour - the Justice Minster admitted as much recently.
There's no such thing as a non-national. People on lower incomes are on housing lists. First generation immigrants are generally more likely to have low incomes.Also, non-nationals seem to be over-represented on social housing lists in many Local Authorities. (According to a PQ/FOI a few years back it was 36% non-Irish on the housing waiting list in Laois for example, while 53% - a majority in that county on HAP were non-Irish.)
There's no net outward migration of Irish citizens.And while there is also outward migration of Irish nationals - I imagine it doesn't free up as much housing as the equivalent amount of inward migration. (If Saoirse decides to teach in Dubai for a few years she's likely to be leaving an empty bedroom behind in her parents house rather than an empty apartment.)
I agree. It's very hard to address the problem without addressing the root causes. The root causes are many and varied and we can't control the main one which is the massive increase in global money supply over the last few decades coupled with very low bond yields. We can control domestic ones which is the incompetence of the civil servants who write legislation, the incompetence of the local authorities, stupid populist laws around rent controls, the State buying homes in the private sector to turn into public housing, and the fact that our rates of property tax are way too low.I just can't see how housing needs or demands will ever be met as long as these figures persist. (Though I heard a Social Democrats "housing expert" and now TD, saying that the impact of immigration on housing demand is a "red herring" - which truly beggars belief.)
I don't know how on earth you could develop a policy framework on housing/planning for the next 5/10 years without a 100% reliable crystal ball. But they have to be seen to do something I suppose. Expect more meddling and tinkering around the edges.
Our population didn't increase from the 1920's until the 1960's and then only at a slow rate. We as a State got poorer in real terms for the first 40 years after independence. Our housing policies up until the 1970's were monumentally stupid. Thankfully we don't do anything like that now.It seems everyone so far subscribes to the incompetence & overcomplexity theory to explain why a contemporary government can't get houses up as governments did in 20s - 90s.
Given that you must be aware that many countries in the developed world face the same problem with housing costs, many of them worse than ours, you must think that all of those governments have done the same thing and are conspiring with each other... or maybe the answer must lie elsewhere?I don't accept this at all. IT systems have enabled fairly accurate models of housing supply/demand in the private sector. Similar models must exist in the public sector. No government - nor civil service made up of functionaries with their own families - have an interest in failing to house the public. The answer must lie elsewhere.
I believe that the NPF is a product of an administration which sought to limit new housing construction indirectly so as to assure investment funds who bought NAMA estates and apartment blocks of a good return on their investments. Without the latter, these funds wouldn't have invested in the first go down. And, without the investment obtained from the funds, the post-crash banks would not have been able to break out of their vast negative equity debt level - a level so deep that banks up to then couldn't offer a mortgage to people of eminent borrowability. Have you people forgotten the FOR SALE signs on houses for 2 years before 2014 ?
So do we. The question is how we make it affordable. I'd like to see the State removing the costs it adds due to it's incompetence rather than the current policy of using tax payers money to subsidise the cost of those inefficiencies.Most European countries see affordable housing as an essential component of a working economy.
That's around €320,000. The average price of a 3 bed semi in this country is €338,000 (todays Indo). The home owner in the UK will also pay much higher council tax. Their average interest rate is also around 1% higher than here. That means that despite the fact that they have lower wages their net monthly cost is higher.UK is a case in point. £270,000 in national average for a 3-bed semi-detached house. I think most here would settle for that.
We don't make any double glazed window glass in this country.@Purple
Don't underestimate Ireland building materials industry (cement, aggregate, softwoods, insulation, glass, etc) in your estimations.
The problem is that there are so many small builders. That also adds significantly to our cost base for large scale new builds.Where planning is non-obstructive (though not agreeable to every madcap proposal) and where the small builder has access to finance, this price will come down considerably.
Yes, but we either allow significant migration or we have lots of kids and significantly increase our retirement age and cut State pension rates.Legal (i.e work permit/student visa) migration is the largest factor - the numbers are just staggering in historical terms...
We don't make any double glazed window glass in this country.
The problem is that there are so many small builders. That also adds significantly to our cost base for large scale new builds.
They process glass, they don't make it. Glass for windows is made by floating glass on a bed of molten tin. It's very capital intensive process.Double- and triple-glazed, Purple.
And shame on you, sir, for your lack of faith
I know. It's a labour intensive production process rather than a capital intensive process.Most quality-build houses in this country are built by small family builders who do about 3 or 4 houses a year.
I'm a Tradesman and I've the height of respect for those with building trades. They have the skills to work on refurbishing and extending our existing older housing stock but new houses should be built at scale in a factory and assembled onsite. Otherwise it will remain an expensive and slow process, constrained by labour shortages and delays. That adds to financing costs as well as hard production costs.Instead of knocking these guys - many of whom are multi-skilled tradesmen, i.e. blocklayers, plasterers, carpenters, glass-fitters - I think we should be asking ourselves what is it we might be able to do to keep these companies going now and for the next crowd rising up.
Factory built homes will, obviously, also be of a far higher quality.
But which aspect of inward migration could be managed and with what consequences for finding necessary workers in the economy.inward migration which remains at truly astonishing levels. This could be managed at more controllable, predictable levels but Government has little interest in pursuing that kind of policy.
Absolutely. If we continue to have a very successful economy then we will continue to need inward movement of people. Any successful economy with inward flow of workers will struggle with accommodation, but there are also other reasons contributing, and of course they need to be addressed. An unsuccessful economy, with outward migration, as we well know, does not have similar housing issues!We need immigrants and lots of them. We also need reforms to the welfare system
Kind of, but far more can be done off site. Panels with all the first fix included can be manufactured off-site.I suppose you'd see timber-frame houses as factory built ?
Yep, groundworks would have to done in a more conventional way but there is ample room for modernisation and efficiencies there too.Even at that you still need a proper builder to:
(1) Get foundations, drains, footings and ground floors.
No, that can mostly be done off site. Houses can be designed and spec'd in the same way as you'd design and spec a kitchen.(2) External block/brick leaf, plastering outside and skimming inside and anything else the timber-frame gang won't do.
Yep, leave them to the retrofit and refurbishment of the current housing stock, which is probably where most of them are anyway.A lot of small builders won't do the above work if they're not getting the structural work too. The price works out about the same be it block or timber frame to the same U value.
That's very unlikely but even so a factory built home will require far less skilled labour, can run 24/7 and doesn't stop with bad weather.If a builder has all the answers to what he has to do (unlike Dermot Bannon managed jobs) there is no reason why the work should last more than 3-4 months. Besides, the job term is in the contract and enforceable bar a pandemic or cement strike.
Big construction companies (a relative term by international standards) are also grossly inefficient as they are not open to international competition. When the component parts of houses can be flat packs and shipped from Chine (or large factories on the mainland or even Britain) then we'd have real competition.We all have to be careful that we don't swallow the nonsense about big construction companies only being able to deliver Ireland's acute demand for new houses. Big construction companies can afford to be dog idle till the house prices rise to where they want them - they have the cash in the bank to do so and can lay off any subbies they no longer need.
I'm in manufacturing and we can supply products cheaper than we did 20 years ago because we have changed with the times and adapt to compete internationally. We have robots and automated machinery running production unmanned 24/7. We've higher wages, higher material costs, higher energy costs, higher rates and insurance etc but we've had to find a way of competing internationally. In the 30 or so years I've been working in this sector it has been totally transformed. It is completely unrecognisable. If Charles Dickens, or the aforementioned Jesse, came back from the dead and walked around a present day building site he'd see pretty much the same things as he'd have seen in his pomp.Small builders are essentially working to keep themselves in wages - they have little or no cash in the bank and no land banks whatever. The Big Construction lobby is really today's version of the Big Developer lobby in Celtic Tiger days - it's all being orchestrated by the banks in this country who haven't the balls to take on the real risks of lending to farmers or manufacturing.
Yes, planning is one of the factors which is completely within our control and we've made a total balls of it.Besides, it's the national policy on planning that's holding local authority planning offices from going all in on new housing applications. The delays of years and years with this makes a joke out of the additional delays in building new houses using a small builder instead of a big contractor.
I try to avoid CavanPurple, you need to be taken to one of the many creeks in Co Cavan to be immersed and born again like Jesse and Zee to face the Ireland of today.
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