Academic literature on the topic 'Irish housing market'

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Journal articles on the topic "Irish housing market"

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Cronin, David, and Kieran McQuinn. "House Prices and the Credit-Driven Household Demand Channel: The Case of the Irish Economy." Credit and Capital Markets – Kredit und Kapital 54, no. 2 (April 1, 2021): 199–221. http://dx.doi.org/10.3790/ccm.54.2.199.

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The performance of the Irish economy stands out across western economies over the past two decades as the later years of its “Celtic Tiger” phase gave way to a sharp and extremely large economic downturn between 2008 and 2012. This severe recession has been followed by a Lazarus-style economic recovery in recent years. This paper examines the role played by the credit-driven housing net worth channel in the path that Irish economic performance has taken between 2002 and 2019 by specific reference to developments in the domestic labour market. We find a significant positive relationship between housing net worth and employment growth in Ireland, manifesting itself through the non-traded sector of the economy between 2007 and 2012. This followed the emergence and then bursting of a substantial credit-fuelled housing market bubble in the Irish residential property market. Our analysis indicates no evident link between economic activity and a credit-driven housing net worth channel in recent years. This may reflect market and regulatory responses to the banking crisis-led recession of the late 2000s and early 2010s.
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Smyth, Diarmaid Addison, and Kieran McQuinn. "Assessing the sustainable nature of housing-related taxation receipts: the case of Ireland." Journal of European Real Estate Research 9, no. 2 (August 1, 2016): 193–214. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/jerer-01-2016-0004.

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Purpose The Irish fiscal position was significantly affected by the recent financial crisis. Budgetary surpluses quickly gave way to significant deficits post 2007, culminating into a lengthy excessive deficit procedure and entry into a formal EU/IMF assistance programme in 2010. Much of the deterioration in the public finances was caused by a sharp decline in property-related taxes because the Irish housing market rapidly contracted. In this paper, the authors quantify the extent to which disequilibria in the housing market can affect the tax take, finding significant implications over an extended period. Design/methodology/approach The authors attempt to quantify the extent of housing-related tax windfall gains and losses in Ireland over a 30-year period as a result of disequilibrium in the housing market. This involves a three-step modelling approach where we relate property-dependent taxes to the housing market while estimating equilibrium in the latter before solving for the tax take consistent with that equilibrium. In so doing, the authors find that the fiscal position compatible with equilibrium in the housing market has at times diverged greatly from actual outturns. Findings This paper confirms the significant role played by the housing market in influencing both the tax-take and the overall fiscal position. The authors find that there have been a number of instances where excesses in the housing market have spilled over into fiscal aggregates, notably in the housing bubble period between 2003 and 2008. However, with the on-going adjustments in the housing market, it would appear that prices and volumes have overcorrected in recent years. Overall, much greater emphasis should be given to the role of the housing market in forecasting key taxation aggregates. Originality/value The recent crisis highlighted how domestic policy mistakes (both in terms of budgetary planning and financial market regulation) can greatly amplify economic shocks. Irish budgetary policy in the run up to the financial crisis of 2008/2009 was clearly based on unsustainable levels of housing-related tax receipts. This paper highlights the need for a much more granular approach in framing tax forecasts and in assessing the public finances by more explicitly factoring in housing market developments.
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Stevenson, Simon, and James Young. "Forecasting Housing Supply: Empirical Evidence from the Irish Market." European Journal of Housing Policy 7, no. 1 (February 15, 2007): 1–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14616710601132518.

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McIntyre, Anthony P. "Home Truths: Property TV, Financialization, and the Housing Crisis in Contemporary Ireland." Television & New Media 22, no. 1 (November 30, 2020): 65–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1527476420975755.

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This article examines how a specific form of lifestyle programming indexes both national concerns and transnational financial trends as well as diffuse social fissures in Irish life. Emerging in the late 1990s amid a construction boom, Irish property television adapted and thrived through the subsequent post-2008 crash, the concomitant implementation of austerity policies and an ensuing housing crisis. This boom-to-bust cycle was precipitated by the financialization of property within Ireland, a process whereby housing and commercial property became embedded in transnational financial market cycles. Through an analysis of three key examples of the genre, this article argues that for the most part, Irish property television seeks to hold at bay anxieties generated by a growing wealth and income disparity in the state. While this programming displays an ideological commitment to the “investor subjects” of home-ownership, increasingly the concerns of those excluded from this version of the good life are evident.
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Egan, Paul, and Kieran McQuinn. "Regime switching and the responsiveness of prices to supply: The case of the Irish housing market." Quarterly Review of Economics and Finance 87 (February 2023): 82–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.qref.2022.12.001.

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Addison-Smyth, Diarmaid, Kieran McQuinn, and Gerard O'Reilly. "Supply Response in an Uncertain Market: Assessing Future Implications for Activity Levels in the Irish Housing Sector." European Journal of Housing Policy 9, no. 3 (September 9, 2009): 259–83. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14616710903138767.

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Agbonaye, Osaru, Patrick Keatley, Ye Huang, Motasem Bani-Mustafa, Oluwasola O. Ademulegun, and Neil Hewitt. "Value of demand flexibility for providing ancillary services: A case for social housing in the Irish DS3 market." Utilities Policy 67 (December 2020): 101130. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jup.2020.101130.

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Duffy, David, and Niall O’Hanlon. "Negative equity in Ireland: estimates using loan-level data." Journal of European Real Estate Research 7, no. 3 (October 28, 2014): 327–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/jerer-01-2014-0009.

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Purpose – This paper aims to, using a unique loan-level data set, show the extent to which negative equity in Ireland is concentrated in younger age groups. The sharp decline in house prices since 2007 has led to the emergence of widespread negative equity in Ireland. However, little is known about the type of borrower experiencing negative equity. Design/methodology/approach – This paper uses a unique data set that, for a large sample of mortgages, provides details on both the characteristics of the borrowers and their mortgages. Using this data set, the paper estimates the incidence of negative equity by analysing loans taken out to purchase a primary residence in the period 2005-2012. Findings – The analysis finds the situation in Ireland to be much more severe than that being experienced in other housing market downturns at present, with 64 per cent of borrowers in the period 2005-2012 experiencing negative equity. Analysis by age gives rise to concern, with the majority of those in negative equity aged under 40 years. The paper also points to the large wealth loss experienced by Irish households, in the order of 43 billion, as a result of the fall in property values. Originality/value – The paper is one of the first using loan-level time-series data in Ireland. It highlights the growth in negative equity during the crisis and the extent to which it is concentrated in the younger age groups. It also provides an estimate of the loss in wealth suffered by all households due to the fall in Irish house prices.
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Hay, Colin, and Nicola Smith. "The story of a North Sea bubble: the strange demise of the Anglo-liberal growth model in the United Kingdom and Ireland." European Political Science Review 5, no. 3 (August 31, 2012): 401–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1755773912000185.

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In the wake of the deepest and longest recession that the United Kingdom has experienced since the 1930s and the Irish Republic has experienced since the 1980s, this paper examines the origins, sustenance, and puncturing of the growth dynamic both economies have enjoyed since the early 1990s. It identifies, in both cases, elements of an ‘Anglo-liberal growth model’. For as long as it lasted, this took the form of a consumer boom fuelled by growing private indebtedness (typically secured against property in a rising housing market) and was itself dependent on the nurturing and sustenance of a low inflation–low interest rate equilibrium. Of the two cases, it is the United Kingdom that presents the purer form of Anglo-liberal growth; in Ireland, a hybrid growth model can be seen to have developed in which Anglo-liberal growth was allied to a more conventional (and ultimately more sustainable) export-oriented growth dynamic. The paper seeks to gauge the character, paradigmatic significance, and effectiveness of the interventions made in the attempt to shore up the Anglo-liberal growth model and the rather different prospects for the resumption of growth in the years ahead. It argues that the Anglo-liberal growth model is, indeed, fatally flawed. In such a context, it is difficult to see how sustained economic growth can be restored, in the UK case, in the absence of a completely new growth model and, in the Irish case, without the cleansing of the long-standing export-oriented growth model of the Anglo-liberal trappings it has acquired in recent years.
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Collier, Peter. "Ireland's Rurban Horizon: New Identities from Home Development Markets in Rural Ireland." Irish Journal of Sociology 13, no. 1 (May 2004): 88–108. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/079160350401300107.

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Estyn Evans (1973) described the principal heritage of the Irish countryside as pastoral. This way of life evolved alongside different agrarian populations and field systems. Its history is characterised by the abundance of people and the scarcity of land. This heritage still traces its characteristics on contemporary rural morphologies. The traveller sees new houses on almost every by-road. It seems that the Irish prefer to live in small fields bordering roadways than in towns or cities. Traditionalists argue that this phenomenon, known popularly as ‘one-off’ housing, is part of the nation's pastoral heritage going back thousands of years. This paper shows that home development markets are layering new identities across rural spaces. It looks at rurbanisation as a phenomenon of Ireland's post-agricultural transformation, increased affluence and faster spatial mobility.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Irish housing market"

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Fearon, Kyle. "Formal Institutions in Irish Planning: Europeanization Before and after the Celtic Tiger." Thesis, Blekinge Tekniska Högskola, Institutionen för fysisk planering, 2012. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:bth-13024.

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Many economies throughout the world were devastated by the global financial crisis of 2007-2008. Ireland in particular experienced a severe collapse in its housing market. Despite the progression of European-influenced planning policy that was meant to promote balanced regional development in Ireland, the country's housing market vastly overbuilt, exacerbating a housing market crash that ended the Celtic Tiger era. Drawing on Europeanization and historical institutionalism as theoretical frameworks, this thesis argues that the link between these EU-influenced policy principles and local Irish planning practice was weak during an important phase of Ireland's economic growth. This conclusion is demonstrated through the analysis of a case study, McEvoy and Smith v. Meath County Council. The findings show that while Ireland's national government created an ambitious National Spatial Strategy modeled on EU principles, non-binding Regional Planning Guidelines allowed local authorities to continue granting zoning changes and permissions. These decisions were therefore uninhibited by the constraints of population projections, consideration for infrastructure provision, and overall good planning practice. This research calls into question the effectiveness of transferring policy principles from the EU to Member States. It suggests more generally that to implement policy and law successfully, policy makers must appreciate the societal and economic context in which these rules will operate.
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Books on the topic "Irish housing market"

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Kenna, Padraic, Irish Council for Social Housing Staff, and National University of Ireland, Galway, Centre for Housing Law, Rights and Policy Staff. Supporting the Irish Housing System to Address Housing Market Failure: Cost Rental Housing and Services of General Economic Interest. Unknown Publisher, 2021.

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Book chapters on the topic "Irish housing market"

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Stevenson, Simon. "The Dynamics of the Irish Housing Market." In Global Housing Markets, 101–33. Hoboken, NJ, USA: John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/9781119200505.ch5.

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Allen, Mike, Lars Benjaminsen, Eoin O’Sullivan, and Nicholas Pleace. "Explanations: housing matters." In Ending Homelessness?, 103–38. Policy Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1332/policypress/9781447347170.003.0005.

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Chapter 5 explores the role of Housing First and then the broader housing market, particularly social housing, in explaining the variations in outcomes described in previous chapters. The chapter argues that the scale of secure affordable housing and the targeting of those experiencing homelessness are crucial in reducing homelessness. The Irish do worse in this regard despite expending considerable amounts of public funding on the provision of social housing. This is because it largely relies on private providers to provide housing, with the gap between ability to pay and market rents made up by a housing benefit payment. Denmark retains a considerable stock of public social housing, but is facing tight housing markets in its major urban areas, particularly Copenhagen, where homelessness in concentrated. In Finland, the steady provision of secure affordable housing, coupled with a housing-led/focused response to homelessness have allowed for the provision of a significant number of secure tenancies for households experiencing homelessness.
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Hearne, Rory. "The lost decade of social and affordable housing: austerity and marketisation." In Housing Shock, 167–90. Policy Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1332/policypress/9781447353898.003.0009.

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This chapter outlines the ‘lost decade’ of social housing provision in Ireland: the austerity and marketisation policies that resulted in the collapse of social housing building from 2009 to 2019. It shows how austerity measures involved an intensification of the ongoing neoliberal shift from the direct building of social housing by local authorities to the marketisation of social housing provision through the private sector. The forms of marketisation are detailed including the increased use of the private rental sector for social housing (via subsidies and leasing), but also the purchasing of units from the private market. It details how from 2010 onwards, the provision of social housing via subsidies to the private rental sector almost entirely replaced direct building of social housing. This includes the Governments housing plan, Rebuilding Ireland which embedded marketisation and austerity, by using the housing benefit - the Housing Assistance Payment (HAP) as the main form of housing provision. It details how HAP and other private market forms of social housing provision worsens the housing supply crisis, is poor value for money, results in tenant insecurity and discrimination, and facilitates the financialisation of housing. And how this is one of the main reasons the Irish housing system suffered such a major shock with the emergence of a new homelessness crisis in 2013.
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Hearne, Rory. "The new waves of financialisation: vultures and REITs." In Housing Shock, 131–46. Policy Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1332/policypress/9781447353898.003.0007.

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This chapter describes and details the wave of global real estate and vulture investment in distressed assets and loans, as the second wave of financialisation of residential property (housing), following the first wave of financial market and equity involvement in mortgage lending and securitisation from the late 1990s to 2008. It then defines and details a third wave of financialisation is evident in the post-2010 period as global institutional investors have increasingly invested in the private rental ‘build-to-rent’ sector. This third wave is a further development in the restructuring of the finance–real estate relationship through the increased role of large-scale corporate finance and global private equity funds (pension funds, hedge funds, wealth funds, shell funds, private equity) in the provision of rental residential property. It shows how housing and land is providing another important vehicle for investing the global ‘wall of money’ searching for higher returns in a context of reduced profitability and rising risk in the wider ‘real’ economy. It details how the Irish state’s strategy to overcome the global property and financial crash of 2008 and achieve the recovery of financial institutions and the wider economy was based on the sale of ‘toxic’ and ‘non-performing’ loans and associated land and property, at a considerable discount, to international ‘vulture funds’ and property investors via the National Asset Management Agency (NAMA) and domestic banks. The strategy was based on a deepening of the financialisation of the Irish housing (and wider property) system.
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Hearne, Rory. "Inequality and financialisation." In Housing Shock, 147–66. Policy Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1332/policypress/9781447353898.003.0008.

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This chapter details the dramatic increase in investor flows into real estate in Ireland and how global investors view the ‘build-to-rent’ sector as a key area for investment. It shows that the non-household sector significantly increased its role in buying residential property in Ireland from 2013 onwards. It sets out how global equity, institutional investors and real estate funds are moving into student accommodation making it less affordable. It looks at how new planning laws promote micro-apartments and how such build-to-rent co-living spaces fail to provide an acceptable living environment. It explores the downsides of global investment and hyperfinancialisation and is adding significantly to demand, thus inflating property prices and rents and how corporate landlords are becoming a real force and have the power to set new (higher) market rents in certain areas embedding a embeds a permanent unaffordability into the housing market. It shows how Ireland is facilitating the global financialisation of housing through its tax and regulatory regime for REITs, global real estate investors and vultures which is of international significance as it is both facilitates, and increases the profitability in, equity investment in residential property.It finishes by detailing the new forms of inequality resulting from financialisation of housing - the winners and losers in the Irish housing system.
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"Young people’s trajectories through Irish housing booms and busts: headship, housing and labour market access among the under 30s since the late 1960s." In Young People and Housing, 217–34. Routledge, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780203095096-20.

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Hearne, Rory. "Introduction: a new housing crisis." In Housing Shock, 1–20. Policy Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1332/policypress/9781447353898.003.0001.

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This Chapter details how the Irish housing systems, and housing systems across the world, are experiencing a structural ‘shock’. We are in the midst of an unprecedented housing and homelessness crisis. This details the dramatic increase in housing inequalities and exclusion, from the rise in homelessness, mortgage arrears and foreclosures, to the collapse in home-ownership rates and, in particular, the emergence of ‘Generation Rent’ and ‘Generation Stuck at Home’. This new Generation Rent is being locked out of traditional routes to affordable secure housing such as home ownership, social housing and secure low-rent housing. They are being pushed into private rental markets with unaffordable high rents and insecurity of tenure, or forced into hidden homelessness, couchsurfing, sleeping in cars, or pushed back to live with their parents. Ireland has had the largest fall in home ownership rates among European Union (EU) countries in the past three decades. This chapter shows that the current housing situation and crisis is not a temporary blip, but a deep and profound structural crisis that is in danger of becoming a permanent crisis. Our national and global housing systems are in crisis and this is a key juncture.
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Powell, Fred. "Conclusion." In The Political Economy of the Irish Welfare State. Policy Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1332/policypress/9781447332916.003.0011.

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This chapter summarizes key themes and presents some final thoughts. The book has evaluated the political meaning and social reality of the Irish welfare state at the centenary point of the Irish revolution (1913–23). It argued that unlike many other modern democratic societies, the term ‘welfare state’ has had a weak political resonance in the lexicon of Irish social policy discourse. This reflects the weakness of the modernist project in Ireland and the absence of a classical European left-right political divide that gave shape to modern democratic politics. A more socially just republic will involve a universal welfare state charged with tackling the challenges of insecure job markets, scarce housing, and overstretched public services as a democratic imperative. A universal welfare state will also involve ten core social policy initiatives, including a universal health and social care system funded from taxation, ending child poverty, and addressing social inequality.
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Conference papers on the topic "Irish housing market"

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"Regulating the Rented Residential Sector of the Housing Market, an Irish Solution to a Europe Wide Problem." In 2005 European Real Estate Society conference in association with the International Real Estate Society: ERES Conference 2005. ERES, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.15396/eres2005_162.

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