Archive for January 2024
Nearly 30,000 housing units held up in planning or legal review – report
Up to 29,000 housing units are being held up in the planning process or in judicial reviews, a new report from construction consultancy Mitchell McDermott has found. That amounts to almost a full year of housing output at current levels of delivery. The report calculates that 20,683 residential units are being delayed by up to…
Read MoreProperty price growth increases to 2.9% in November – CSO
Property price growth picked up on an annual basis for the third successive month in November, increasing by 2.9% after prices rose by 0.8% on a monthly basis, new Central Statistics Office figures show today. Annual price growth had cooled from a recent peak of 15.1% in February 2022 to a near three-year low of…
Read MoreNew proposals to keep cash in circulation welcomed
The Chief Executive of Irish Rural Link has welcomed proposed legislation that will keep cash circulating in society as more people turn to digital payments. Under plans being brought to Cabinet today by Minister for Finance Michael McGrath, shops and pharmacies will have to accept cash as part of plans to keep physical money in…
Read MoreEnterprise Committee to discuss minimum wages
The Oireachtas Committee on Enterprise, Trade and Employment will discuss the regulatory and legislative changes required for the transposition of an EU directive on minimum wages. The Directive on Adequate Minimum Wages seeks to reduce working poverty and inequality by improving the adequacy of statutory minimum wages as well as the promotion of collective bargaining.…
Read MoreProfessional employment market stabilising
The professional jobs market is showing signs of stabilising with a 30% decline in the number of job seekers and an 18% drop in the number of vacancies in 2023. The figures in the Morgan McKinley Employment Monitor suggest growing stability in job tenures and a lower rate of attrition, likely influenced by retention strategies…
Read MoreJump in new homes under construction, vacancy rate dips
The number of new homes under construction has jumped, while the residential vacancy rate has dipped, a new report shows. The data from GeoDirectory, a database of commercial and residential buildings, shows that almost 23,000 new homes were being built across the country last December, up 3.5% on the previous year. After Dublin, building levels…
Read More€129.5m paid out under film tax relief scheme last year
New movies starring Cillian Murphy and Jamie Dornan were some of the big winners in the Section 481 film corporation tax credit scheme for the Irish movie and TV production sector last year. New figures provided by the Revenue Commissioners show that the value of payments made under the Section 481 film corporation tax credit…
Read MoreNew remote working rules expected this month
The Workplace Relations Commission (WRC) is expected to complete a new code of practice on the right to request remote working by the end of this month. The code will set out practical guidance for employers and employees when it comes to requesting remote or flexible work. “The WRC intends to finalise the code by…
Read MoreMajority want stricter regulation of social media algorithm – survey
Almost three-quarters of Irish people believe that social media algorithms, that select the content users see, should be regulated more strictly. The findings are contained in new research from the Irish Council for Civil Liberties (ICCL) and Uplift which also shows that 82% of those surveyed believe so-called “recommender systems” should be switched off. Recommender…
Read MoreEngineering and construction among hardest to fill jobs
New data shows that instrumentation engineers, ad reviewers, and mechanical and electrical project managers are the most difficult jobs to fill. The ‘Hardest to Fill Jobs’ analysis of Irish job posts by jobs site Indeed shows that online moderators, tax consultants and construction specialists are also proving difficult to recruit. Indeed’s analysis examined job postings…
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