Ronan Lyons
@ronanlyons.bsky.social
Housing, cities, history. Professor in Economics at Trinity College Dublin, Data Lead at CEPH. Dad of 3, husband of 1, soccer coach, rugby fan. ronanlyons.com and ronanlyons.substack.com.
The Housing Theory of Everything strikes again.
Now out in @cpsjournal.bsky.social. In our new article, @denis-cohen.bsky.social @thmskrr.bsky.social and I show that where local rent prices increase more, residents with lower incomes become more likely to support the radical right AfD.
journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/...
journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/...
September 25, 2025 at 6:20 AM
The Housing Theory of Everything strikes again.
My theory is that this very important glitch in public economic reasoning stems from the length of time it takes to build homes (and that homes are built when prices are rising).
Building more housing reduces housing costs and is good. But one reason this isn’t the basis for a massive political movement is that most people think building more housing actually raises prices. You might even say building more housing isn’t very Popular
September 24, 2025 at 6:01 AM
My theory is that this very important glitch in public economic reasoning stems from the length of time it takes to build homes (and that homes are built when prices are rising).
Reposted by Ronan Lyons
People should be restricted to one online opinion a day. That would increase the quality and thought going into each opinion, and reduce the numbers of mindless knee jerk reaction takes spoiling the internet.
September 22, 2025 at 12:55 PM
People should be restricted to one online opinion a day. That would increase the quality and thought going into each opinion, and reduce the numbers of mindless knee jerk reaction takes spoiling the internet.
Ireland has ~1.5 million homes suitable for families. Ireland is very unlikely to ever have more than 0.8m families (with kids under 18).
Unbelievable that anyone paying attention to the housing crisis could have missed that the crisis is/will be for 1-2 person households.
www.rte.ie/brainstorm/2...
Unbelievable that anyone paying attention to the housing crisis could have missed that the crisis is/will be for 1-2 person households.
www.rte.ie/brainstorm/2...
Why new apartment standards won't mean housing more people
Half of the households in Ireland have children, yet there is no plan for where, and how, the next generations will live
www.rte.ie
September 12, 2025 at 9:43 AM
Ireland has ~1.5 million homes suitable for families. Ireland is very unlikely to ever have more than 0.8m families (with kids under 18).
Unbelievable that anyone paying attention to the housing crisis could have missed that the crisis is/will be for 1-2 person households.
www.rte.ie/brainstorm/2...
Unbelievable that anyone paying attention to the housing crisis could have missed that the crisis is/will be for 1-2 person households.
www.rte.ie/brainstorm/2...
Ireland has overtaken another EU member state, in population, for the first time since joining the EEC back in 1972. At current trends, Ireland will overtake Finland in 2028. (And Scotland maybe in 2027, just about.)
August 26, 2025 at 12:49 PM
Ireland has overtaken another EU member state, in population, for the first time since joining the EEC back in 1972. At current trends, Ireland will overtake Finland in 2028. (And Scotland maybe in 2027, just about.)
Important evidence on why housing is not like other markets - not because demand and supply don't work but because voters don't believe they do (despite the evidence). Likely key here is the long lag required to get new housing supply v other goods - so extra supply is associated with higher prices.
Interesting findings from @cselmendorf.bsky.social, Nall, and @stano.bsky.social in JEP. There is a widespread lack of understanding on how supply of housing affects housing costs, even while the same survey respondents understand other supply-cost relationships pubs.aeaweb.org/doi/pdfplus/...
August 14, 2025 at 8:45 PM
Important evidence on why housing is not like other markets - not because demand and supply don't work but because voters don't believe they do (despite the evidence). Likely key here is the long lag required to get new housing supply v other goods - so extra supply is associated with higher prices.
Reposted by Ronan Lyons
The latest JEP has an extraordinary set of papers on the economics of housing.
My favorite? The one showing that most people incorrectly believe that increasing housing supply won't lower housing costs.
Subsidizing home-buying is popular even though it raises costs. 🤦
www.aeaweb.org/issues/814
My favorite? The one showing that most people incorrectly believe that increasing housing supply won't lower housing costs.
Subsidizing home-buying is popular even though it raises costs. 🤦
www.aeaweb.org/issues/814
August 14, 2025 at 2:05 PM
The latest JEP has an extraordinary set of papers on the economics of housing.
My favorite? The one showing that most people incorrectly believe that increasing housing supply won't lower housing costs.
Subsidizing home-buying is popular even though it raises costs. 🤦
www.aeaweb.org/issues/814
My favorite? The one showing that most people incorrectly believe that increasing housing supply won't lower housing costs.
Subsidizing home-buying is popular even though it raises costs. 🤦
www.aeaweb.org/issues/814
Reposted by Ronan Lyons
*Academics in early August
August 6, 2025 at 4:31 PM
*Academics in early August
Given the CSO's pioneering work to develop true measures of national well-being in a globalized world economy, Ireland can feel a little bit cheated at being left out! For those curious, GNI* in 2024 was 57% of GDP. Following that thru, it would place Ireland ~10th, level with Germany.
What is the richest country in the world in 2025?
Our annual ranking compares economies in three different ways
www.economist.com
July 22, 2025 at 8:41 PM
Given the CSO's pioneering work to develop true measures of national well-being in a globalized world economy, Ireland can feel a little bit cheated at being left out! For those curious, GNI* in 2024 was 57% of GDP. Following that thru, it would place Ireland ~10th, level with Germany.
Reposted by Ronan Lyons
Births weren't officially registered in Ireland until 1864 and then the census returns were burnt in the Four Courts, making it really hard for people in the 1920s/30s to prove their ages to get a pension. The acceptable alternative documentation included dated birthday cards
June 30, 2025 at 9:28 PM
Births weren't officially registered in Ireland until 1864 and then the census returns were burnt in the Four Courts, making it really hard for people in the 1920s/30s to prove their ages to get a pension. The acceptable alternative documentation included dated birthday cards
Reposted by Ronan Lyons
Extremely relatable.
June 18, 2025 at 10:01 PM
Extremely relatable.
Reposted by Ronan Lyons
Why do women engage in sex work, especially given the health risks associated with the market?
This paper shows that during a historical recession, the number of sex work establishments rose, suggesting that economic hardship may drive women into the market.
This paper shows that during a historical recession, the number of sex work establishments rose, suggesting that economic hardship may drive women into the market.
June 30, 2025 at 4:52 PM
Why do women engage in sex work, especially given the health risks associated with the market?
This paper shows that during a historical recession, the number of sex work establishments rose, suggesting that economic hardship may drive women into the market.
This paper shows that during a historical recession, the number of sex work establishments rose, suggesting that economic hardship may drive women into the market.
What determines electoral success in Ireland? Evidence from the last 30 years says being a woman reduces re-election chances by ten percentage points. Don't be in the out-going government (unless you're a Senior Minister). And Being Junior Minister, it turns out, does nothing.
Determinants of Incumbent Electoral Success: Evidence from 30 Years of Irish Elections | The Economic and Social Review
We examine the determinants of incumbent electoral success among members of Ireland’s lower house of parliament, Dáil Éireann, over a time-period covering seven General Elections (1992 to 2020). We utilise multiple sources to create a dataset linking incumbent politicians’ electoral outcomes to personal characteristics, constituency and election-specific characteristics, as well as a range of constituency-level socioeconomic variables. Our analysis reveals a number of important factors in determining the re-election success of politicians. Notably, being a woman reduces an incumbent’s chances of re-election by 10 percentage points, even after controlling for a wide range of other potentially important factors. Holding a senior ministerial position is found to significantly boost an incumbent’s re-election prospects, while being a junior minister has no impact. However, absent a senior ministerial position, being a member of a ruling government party or coalition is associated with significantly lower re-election success. We construct a measure of competitiveness and find that an incumbent in a more competitive constituency is less likely to be elected, while past performance, as measured by the order in which an incumbent is elected in the previous contest, is found to be an important predictor of current success.
www.esr.ie
June 27, 2025 at 11:20 AM
What determines electoral success in Ireland? Evidence from the last 30 years says being a woman reduces re-election chances by ten percentage points. Don't be in the out-going government (unless you're a Senior Minister). And Being Junior Minister, it turns out, does nothing.
And that's ok because the vast majority of additional housing required in all high-income countries is housing for 1-2 person households.
An apartment-building boom that’s now ending delivered a lot of one-bedroom dwellings … and not much family-friendly housing, says @byjustinfox.bsky.social 🏘️
Read the column: bloom.bg/3HYwuJP
Read the column: bloom.bg/3HYwuJP
June 26, 2025 at 6:58 PM
And that's ok because the vast majority of additional housing required in all high-income countries is housing for 1-2 person households.
Reposted by Ronan Lyons
The €15.6 billion in user benefits over 60 years, by a rough calculation, works out to around €700,000 per day in transport user benefits being lost from not having a metro. @businesspost.bsky.social
www.businesspost.ie/politics/bri...
www.businesspost.ie/politics/bri...
Brian Caulfield: Metrolink is 1,000 days awaiting planning - will it ever be built?
www.businesspost.ie
June 26, 2025 at 6:49 AM
The €15.6 billion in user benefits over 60 years, by a rough calculation, works out to around €700,000 per day in transport user benefits being lost from not having a metro. @businesspost.bsky.social
www.businesspost.ie/politics/bri...
www.businesspost.ie/politics/bri...
This. 500 times over in central Dublin.
Again and again and again.
Again and again and again.
BEFORE and AFTER. You are not going to believe me this time…but I swear…I absolutely swear this is the same fucking street.
June 25, 2025 at 10:02 PM
This. 500 times over in central Dublin.
Again and again and again.
Again and again and again.
Reposted by Ronan Lyons
Interesting paper on effect of interviewer gender on gender gap in reported housework. "women tend to report significantly more hours of housework when interviewed by a woman rather than by a man" link.springer.com/article/10.1...
June 25, 2025 at 7:55 AM
Interesting paper on effect of interviewer gender on gender gap in reported housework. "women tend to report significantly more hours of housework when interviewed by a woman rather than by a man" link.springer.com/article/10.1...
Easy to miss with everything else that's going on but ... the world's greatest ever telescope has just started releasing its first images!
Want to download everything from today?
Whether you want a new desktop background or an image to send to friends and family, we've got you covered!
Head to rubinobservatory.org/gallery/collections/first-look-gallery and take your pick 🌌🔭🧪
(...or just download everything, no need to choose!)
Whether you want a new desktop background or an image to send to friends and family, we've got you covered!
Head to rubinobservatory.org/gallery/collections/first-look-gallery and take your pick 🌌🔭🧪
(...or just download everything, no need to choose!)
rubinobservatory.org
June 23, 2025 at 10:32 PM
Easy to miss with everything else that's going on but ... the world's greatest ever telescope has just started releasing its first images!
Reposted by Ronan Lyons
Thanks to everyone who attended our annual workshop! Special thanks to @qubelfastofficial.bsky.social for hosting, and to all our speakers for 2 excellent days of research and conversations. Economic history is thriving!
#econhistory
#econsky
#NSRProject
#econhistory
#econsky
#NSRProject
June 18, 2025 at 3:26 PM
Thanks to everyone who attended our annual workshop! Special thanks to @qubelfastofficial.bsky.social for hosting, and to all our speakers for 2 excellent days of research and conversations. Economic history is thriving!
#econhistory
#econsky
#NSRProject
#econhistory
#econsky
#NSRProject
Can't believe I only figured out today that "Uncle Sam" comes from:
United States of AMerica
United States of AMerica
June 14, 2025 at 10:23 AM
Can't believe I only figured out today that "Uncle Sam" comes from:
United States of AMerica
United States of AMerica
Reposted by Ronan Lyons
A quick reminder that Afghans overwhelmingly did the fighting and dying - nearly 70,000 dead soldiers and police. And then Hegseth’s President abandoned them and cut a deal with the Taliban.
HEGSETH: We wore a patch on our shoulder that said ISAF -- International Security Assistance Force. And you know what the joke was? That is stood for 'I saw Americans fighting.'
COONS: Let's just make clear for the record that our military partners in Afghanistan included many who served and died
COONS: Let's just make clear for the record that our military partners in Afghanistan included many who served and died
June 11, 2025 at 8:19 PM
A quick reminder that Afghans overwhelmingly did the fighting and dying - nearly 70,000 dead soldiers and police. And then Hegseth’s President abandoned them and cut a deal with the Taliban.
Reposted by Ronan Lyons
Funded PhD studentship of €25,000/year for 4 years plus fees available @tcddublin.bsky.social to work with me on Irish women's life writing from the long 18th century! Please spread the word! @ecfjournal.bsky.social @cecs-york.bsky.social @clhlwr.bsky.social @oxfordlifewriting.bsky.social
June 4, 2025 at 8:57 AM
Funded PhD studentship of €25,000/year for 4 years plus fees available @tcddublin.bsky.social to work with me on Irish women's life writing from the long 18th century! Please spread the word! @ecfjournal.bsky.social @cecs-york.bsky.social @clhlwr.bsky.social @oxfordlifewriting.bsky.social
Reposted by Ronan Lyons
🚨Survey for university students🚨
I'm currently carrying out a project for DfE examining student mobility in higher education with Anne Devlin & Maureen O'Reilly
Please share this short survey with any students in UK/ROI, every response helps!
forms.office.com/e/80XqbE5DJG
I'm currently carrying out a project for DfE examining student mobility in higher education with Anne Devlin & Maureen O'Reilly
Please share this short survey with any students in UK/ROI, every response helps!
forms.office.com/e/80XqbE5DJG
Microsoft Forms
forms.office.com
May 21, 2025 at 2:28 PM
🚨Survey for university students🚨
I'm currently carrying out a project for DfE examining student mobility in higher education with Anne Devlin & Maureen O'Reilly
Please share this short survey with any students in UK/ROI, every response helps!
forms.office.com/e/80XqbE5DJG
I'm currently carrying out a project for DfE examining student mobility in higher education with Anne Devlin & Maureen O'Reilly
Please share this short survey with any students in UK/ROI, every response helps!
forms.office.com/e/80XqbE5DJG
"hey Ireland, you get a special mention as a close trading partner of the US in this paper about the impact of tariffs."
"oh, is it good news?"
"..."
"oh, is it good news?"
"..."
Using a dynamic trade and reallocation model with downward nominal wage rigidities to quantitatively assess the economic consequences of recent US tariff increases on imports from various countries, from Andrés Rodríguez-Clare, Mauricio Ulate, and Jose P. Vasquez https://www.nber.org/papers/w33792
May 18, 2025 at 8:03 PM
"hey Ireland, you get a special mention as a close trading partner of the US in this paper about the impact of tariffs."
"oh, is it good news?"
"..."
"oh, is it good news?"
"..."
No doubt there are people born in the 1750s and 1760s in this photo (albeit hidden away inside in the homes as it was taken). Amazing history.
Around now in 1838 Louis Daguerre took this shot in Paris capturing a shoe shiner & customer. Believed to the first of billions of photos of human beings.
May 14, 2025 at 8:18 PM
No doubt there are people born in the 1750s and 1760s in this photo (albeit hidden away inside in the homes as it was taken). Amazing history.