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IDA Ireland

Dáil Éireann Debate, Tuesday - 4 December 2018

Tuesday, 4 December 2018

Questions (272)

Billy Kelleher

Question:

272. Deputy Billy Kelleher asked the Minister for Business, Enterprise and Innovation her views on the report regarding an agency (details supplied) under her remit. [50267/18]

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Written answers

The Government recognises fully how important it is to increase the supply of affordable and quality housing across the country. That is why significant resources have been invested into this area, including through the Rebuilding Ireland Action Plan which includes financing measures, new construction and rental sector improvements. These steps will, first and foremost, ensure that people in Ireland are better able to buy and rent suitable homes. They will also serve to reinforce our national infrastructure in terms of its capacity to accommodate further foreign direct investment.

More broadly, it is important to bear in mind that international investors take a long-term view on where they choose to establish a presence. Investors also use a wide range of criteria to inform such decisions. Our traditional strengths are well known – including our talented workforce, membership of the EU and pro-enterprise policy environment – and these critical factors continue, as the healthy pipeline of investment here demonstrates, to make the country an attractive proposition to overseas firms.

We should not forget either that many of the States that we compete with for investment have challenges of their own – including in housing – when it comes to attracting overseas firms. So while we have infrastructural areas in this country that need further investment and improvement, we are not alone in facing that challenge.

IDA Ireland is fully seized of current housing market conditions in Ireland and recognises that this is an important issue for investors. The Agency’s assessments of the housing market are based on a wide range of sources and a combination of indices, with the aim of forming the clearest possible picture of how Irish rents compare internationally. These information sources are continuously reviewed and contribute to briefings used by IDA staff. It should be remembered too that the overseas firms that the IDA targets to invest in Ireland – many of whom are large multinational companies with an existing presence here – form their own opinions on housing supply and other investment conditions here.

The media piece in question refers to IDA briefing documents that highlight a number of indices regarding the Irish property market. They include a 2018 Residential Tenancies Board figure on average rents in Dublin City. Another index, which was sourced from the Nestpick 2017 Furnished Apartment Index, set out an estimate of the costs of renting small furnished apartments across County Dublin in 2017. It was not suggested by the IDA that this Nestpick index was an authoritative figure for the entire Dublin property market.

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