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Musk’s Dublin return to office order hits a wall

Housing crisis leaves Twitter employees in a quandary

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“People who have upped sticks and relocated on the premise of a full-time remote working option are maybe going to have to reconsider.” Robert Macgoilla Phadraig

DUBLIN: At Twitter’s European headquarte­rs, surviving employees have one big problem with Elon Musk’s demand that everyone return to the office – finding somewhere to live.

Dublin, the Irish capital, where the tech firm has an office that has about 500 employees, is in the midst of a housing crisis driven by a chronic undersuppl­y of new homes and a mass exodus of private landlords.

Prices recently topped the peak they reached in 2007, shortly before an economic crash that almost bankrupted the nation.

Musk’s order prompted complaints on Twitter that it’s impossible to simply move to Dublin and start working from the office.

The Twitter chief executive officer (CEO) clarified in a tweet that employees are allowed to work from home for reasons of logistics, personal matters, or “if their manager vouches for excellence”.

Although staff at Dublin’s Twitter office has shrunk by about a third following the recent exodus, the spat is highlighti­ng a growing problem for the Irish economy as it faces the prospect of recession.

Dublin has flourished in recent years by creating attractive conditions for major companies to set up big offices. The city of 1.3 million will quickly lose its edge if it can’t provide housing for firms eager to get employees back to work.

“Even if one has the funds to rent, one cannot rent,” said Stephen Kinsella, a professor of economics and head of department at the University of Limerick. “That’s a systemic risk.”

Some big internatio­nal firms are taking matters into their own hands. A company associated with Goldman Sachs Group Inc, which moved its European asset management business to Dublin after Brexit, is looking to build nearly 1,000 apartments on a shopping centre car park in north-west

€400mil

Dublin, worth (Us$415mil or Rm1.9bil), according to the Sunday Times.

Ikea’s investment arm has committed €100mil

to fund the developmen­t of more than 250 social housing units.

On the popular listing website daft.ie, there were just under 1,200 properties available to rent across Ireland as of Nov 18. On Aug 1, the number was a little over 700, a fifth of the average from 2015 to 2019.

€1,618 The average listed rent rose 12.6% to (RM7,641) from a year earlier in the second quarter, the most recent statistic available. That was the largest year-on-year increase since at least 2005.

Dublin is no stranger to housing crises, but this one is very different from the bursting of the so-called Celtic Tiger bubble in 2008.

Back then, it was all about oversupply and unsustaina­ble credit. This time, the problem is that there aren’t enough houses to meet demand.

Meanwhile, the Irish population is growing, and the war in Ukraine has pushed up the cost of constructi­on materials, reducing incentives for developers and landowners.

Activity on residentia­l projects has dropped in four of the past five months, according to a BNP Paribas Constructi­on Purchasing Managers’ Index report.

A new block of flats in Dublin owned by Irish Residentia­l Properties REIT Plc was fully occupied a week after it was completed in the summer, according to CEO Margaret Sweeney.

The firm received 600 applicants within an hour and a half for the first 20 units that were marketed and is continuing to see high levels of demand across the city, she said.

So far, government support measures such as grants for developers have done little to alleviate the supply squeeze. A target set in Sept 2021 to deliver on average 33,000 new housing units per year until the end of 2030 is already expected to be revised due to rising demand.

From next year, the central bank will relax its income-to-loan requiremen­ts, making it easier for would-be borrowers to qualify for mortgages.

Job cuts in the tech sector, which currently provides about 6% of workplaces in Ireland, have hit big Irish employers like Facebook parent Meta Platforms Inc and could alleviate some pressure, though that will come at a cost to the economy.

Globally, the tech industry shed 9,587 jobs in October, the highest monthly total since November 2020.

The Irish government has received notice of about 140 redundanci­es on Twitter so far, Deputy Prime Minister Leo Varadkar told reporters last Friday.

The flip side, though, is that job insecurity might let Musk have his way by driving people back to the office, which would put even more pressure on the housing market.

Recruitmen­t decisions are “increasing­ly moving towards the candidate who’s offering flexibilit­y in the return to the office,” said Robert Macgoilla Phadraig, chief commercial officer at Sigmar Recruitmen­t Consultant­s Ltd in Dublin.

“People who have upped sticks and relocated on the premise of a full-time remote working option are maybe going to have to reconsider.”

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