A clear-eyed plan to fix Ireland’s housing
Economist Ronan Lyons argues Ireland’s housing system has become “brittle” and unable to respond to change. He sets out what’s driving the crisis, what it’s doing to society, and how it can be repaired.
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Brittle: How Ireland Built a Housing Crisis and How To Fix It
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A clear-eyed plan to fix Ireland’s housing
Economist Ronan Lyons argues Ireland’s housing system has become “brittle” and unable to respond to change. He sets out what’s driving the crisis, what it’s doing to society, and how it can be repaired.
- Book Synopsis
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Over 50% of Irish people under 40 are either living with their parents or in share accommodation, unable to live either by themselves or with partners despite that being their preference.
The housing crisis is often spoken of as a bubble, but economics professor Ronan Lyons argues that this metaphor is outdated. Rather, Ireland suffers from a brittle housing system, one that has lost the ability to respond to change. This groundbreaking book shows what that brittleness is doing to society, how it emerged and, most critically, how a healthier housing system can be built.
Ideal for readers who…
- Want to understand why housing in Ireland is so expensive — and why it got this way — Ronan Lyons has spent fifteen years researching the Irish housing market, producing the Daft.ie House Price Report and publishing academic work on Irish housing in international economic journals. This isn't commentary: it's analysis from the person who has studied the data most closely.
- Are renting in Ireland and feel like something has gone fundamentally wrong — they're right, and this book explains exactly what. Lyons traces the policy decisions, planning failures, and structural choices that created the crisis, without the vagueness of political debate or the simplification of newspaper opinion columns.
- Want to know if the housing crisis can actually be fixed — and how — the second half of the book's subtitle is "and How To Fix It." Lyons doesn't stop at diagnosis. He sets out the specific policy changes that could resolve Ireland's housing shortage, grounded in international evidence and comparative analysis.
- Follow Irish politics and economics and want the expert account — housing has dominated Irish political debate for a decade. Lyons has been the most consistently cited economist on housing throughout that period. This is the book that puts the full argument in one place, from the person whose research has shaped the policy conversation.
- Are interested in urban economics, planning, and why cities work the way they do — Brittle is not just about Ireland. The mechanisms Lyons describes — how planning restrictions, tax treatment of land, and construction costs interact to constrain housing supply — apply across Europe and beyond. Irish readers will recognise the specific consequences; international readers will recognise the pattern.
- Are buying a gift for someone who cares about Ireland's future — this is the rare economics book that is also urgently relevant to everyday life. Anyone who rents, owns, or is trying to get onto the property ladder in Ireland will find something in here that explains their experience. It is accessible enough for a general reader and rigorous enough to satisfy someone with an economics background.
- About The Author
- Ronan Lyons is Professor in Economics at Trinity College Dublin, with a research focus on housing. Over two decades ago, he established the Daft.ie Report, Ireland's leading independent analysis of the housing market. Over the past decade, he has written extensively on housing and related issues for major newspapers - including for The Currency since 2020 - combining academic evidence with accessible public commentary on housing, the rental sector, planning and urban development.
- Product Details
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- ISBN
- 9781805467137
- Format
- Paperback
- Publisher
- Atlantic Books, (01 October 2026)
- Number of Pages
- 352
- Language
- English
- Dimensions
- 234 x 156 mm
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