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Irish Property Market chat II - *read mod note post #1 before posting*

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Comments

  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,400 ✭✭✭Blut2


    It slowed down from 2011-2016 because housing was actually cheap here during the recovery, but from 2016-2022 it dropped by 2.5% in 6 years, and by all accounts has been dropping even faster since the housing crisis got even worse post-covid.

    The household size is dropping each year, and is also much smaller for immigrants (they've got a much higher percentage of single adults without children than the general population). So our 78k population growth would essentially eat every single house built in those 12 months. Its completely unsustainable for housing alone, nevermind other infrastructure or integration issues.

    As far as housing goes thats also nevermind the 10k-15k homes needed yearly for obsolesence. And nevermind the 200k odd deficit of homes we need to make some sort of reduction in to remedy the housing crisis.

    We need to be building in excess of 60k housing units a year (according to estimates from the CIF, Housing Commission and others) to account for all of this. Instead we're struggling to hit 30k a year, and will be for the forseeable future.

    Thats why the housing crisis is only getting worse, and why home ownership rates will continue, and accelerate, their fall. The data is very clear that we're building tens of thousands too few homes a year.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,699 ✭✭✭DataDude


    There has been lots of cases in this thread of people just unable to accept data that contradicts their view of the world. But this is getting to egregious levels.

    It is blatantly clear that owner occupier rates fell off a cliff when prices were dropping faster than almost any country in history. The fall slowed dramatically as soon as prices started rising. The ‘thesis’ behind this is obvious. We stopped building homes when prices were falling because there was no confidence in what they’d be worth when built. FTB numbers plummeted because banks wouldn’t lend on rapidly depreciating assets.


    Since the recovery in prices, FTBer numbers have exploded. From less than 10,000 in 2011 when prices were on the floor, to 32,000 over the last 12 months. Growing every year. Despite higher and higher prices.

    If you want to go with mass census fraud instead because the above conflicts with your world view, cool.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,457 ✭✭✭Rocket_GD


    Ignore statistics and figures, they don't matter, as some posters "know and see things" that don't align with the evidence so they cannot be true.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,464 ✭✭✭BlueSkyDreams


    The majority of new homes are to rent, rather than to buy. This must skew the home ownership stats.

    There must be a lot of renters happy and capable of buying, but there is literally nothing available for them to buy.

    Forced renters.



  • Registered Users, Subscribers, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,762 ✭✭✭hometruths


    The household size is dropping each year, and is also much smaller for immigrants (they've got a much higher percentage of single adults without children than the general population). 

    Where are you getting this from? Sounds a bit counterintuitive.

    Edit to add:

    Just googled it, and ESRI research suggests you're taking total nonsense.

    • Over half (56 per cent) of all migrants were living in private rented housing in 2016, compared to 13 per cent of Irish-born. 75 per cent of Polish migrants - one of the largest migrant groups in Ireland - lived in private rented accommodation.
    • 8 per cent of Irish-born individuals lived in overcrowded accommodation in 2016, a relatively low proportion when compared internationally. In contrast, almost 20 per cent of migrants in Ireland lived in overcrowded accommodation. Overcrowding rates were particularly high among some non-EEA migrants, including migrants from the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) (37 per cent), Sub-Saharan and Other Africa  (39 per cent), South Asia (41 per cent) and East Asia (37 per cent).

    Overcrowded accommodation doesn't scream smaller household size. These are 2016 figures and stands to reason that it hasn't got any better since, particularly when you consider the current higher proportion of immigration from the regions with particularly high overcrowding.

    https://www.esri.ie/news/migrants-face-greater-challenges-in-the-irish-housing-market-than-irish-born



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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,301 ✭✭✭Ray Palmer


    High and mighty on personal insults here but they ignore yours to me that are still going on. Living rent free in your head it seems



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,457 ✭✭✭Rocket_GD


    Never once personally insulted you, please point out where I did?

    My point was backing up DataDudes post that "There has been lots of cases in this thread of people just unable to accept data that contradicts their view of the world."

    Multiple posters ignore the data, not just yourself.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,400 ✭✭✭Blut2


    "In September, arrivals included 621 ­single men, 169 single females, 66 couples and 375 families. In October, arrivals included 690 single men, 231 single females, 76 couples and 385 families. In November, arrivals included 593 single men, 192 single females, 120 couples and 472 families."

    https://www.independent.ie/irish-news/ireland-and-immigration-the-facts-how-many-men-women-and-children-where-are-they-coming-from-and-which-counties-are-housing-them/a1317067915.html

    Those are a few select months, but the figures are fairly consistent over the years.

    Single people, or non-child having couples, vastly outweigh family units arriving in the country. Both of those categories bring down the average household size from 2.74 once they have their own accomodation.

    And for non-EU student visas its not possible to bring a family with you - you're a single person, on a single visa - "non-EEA students coming to Ireland have no right to bring their family with them. Spouses, partners and children of non-EEA nationals can apply to enter and live in Ireland in their own right, but they cannot apply on the basis of their relationship to a non-EEA student. "

    https://www.citizensinformation.ie/en/moving-country/moving-to-ireland/studying-in-ireland/immigration-nonEEA-students/

    Your figures on overcrowding do nothing to suggest immigrants to Ireland live in larger household sizes, particularly given your own figures state 80% of them do not live in overcrowded housing.

    In general, the vast majority of people who live in above average (2.74+) household sizes in Ireland long term are family units with children.



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