Irish Daily Mirror

Varadkar: Rents will fall within a couple of years

Balance key on homes budget

- BY JAMES WARD news@irishmirro­r.ie

LEO Varadkar has said he expects to see rents falling within the next couple of years.

The Tanaiste added recent moves by the Government to tie the level of rent increases to inflation were effectivel­y a “freeze”, and should result in lower rates in the coming years.

He also backed calls for increased capital investment in housing, but said it must be balanced against competing interests such schools, hospitals and climate change.

Mr Varadkar added: “In the last couple of weeks, I think we’ve seen a lot being done in housing.

“We’ve seen the Land Developmen­t Agency being establishe­d, have seen in effect a rent freeze, rents are now linked to inflation.

“We know that wages are rising faster than inflation.

“So, in real terms, we’d expect to see rents falling over the next couple of years. Falling at least for people who were renting already.”

At a recent party Ard Fheis, the Fine Gael leader set a target of doubling the number of houses built each year from 20,000 to 40,000.

Mr Varadkar said a combinatio­n of public and private investment will be needed to reach the goal.

He added: “It’s my view that we need to roughly double the number of new homes being built in Ireland every year from about 20,000 to 40,000 a year in the future. I understand, and I think most people understand, that you can’t do that in one year. But I think we should be aiming to get to 40,000 a year over a number of years.

“There’s no way we can achieve that without both increased public investment and increased private investment.”

Mr Varadkar agreed with recent analysis from the Economic and Social Research Institute calling for capital investment in housing to be doubled to €4billion-ayear to tackle the State’s housing crisis.

But he said the Government has to balance that advice against the need for investment elsewhere.

He added: “What the ESRI recommends is that we should be willing to borrow more, we should be willing to close the deficit a little bit slower, in order to facilitate greater investment in social housing and public housing. I agree with that analysis.

“But what I think ESRI reports didn’t do is what government­s have to do.

“And that is to recognise that there are other demands for capital investment as well. We need to build new hospitals, too. We need to build new schools as well. We need to invest in climate action.

“One of the difficulti­es, I suppose, with any report coming from any agency, is it doesn’t often look at that wider picture that government­s have to.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Ireland