The European headquarters of several of the biggest technology businesses in the world are located in glass and steel buildings that would not appear out of place in San Francisco or Singapore, just a short stroll from the Luas tram stop in Dublin’s Grand Canal Dock neighborhood. The campus of Google is spread across several addresses. Salesforce and Meta are close by.
The neighborhood has the distinct vibe of a place that was rapidly developed around a very particular type of company, with coffee lines spilling outdoors on a weekday morning and multinational accents. You are essentially looking at the structural core of Ireland’s economic narrative: a 15% corporate tax rate that attracted some of the world’s most successful businesses to route their European operations—and, in some cases, their global profits—through a nation with a population of just over five million.
In terms of headline GDP, the outcome makes Ireland seem like one of the richest countries in the world per capita. Additionally, the OECD, Irish economists, and the statistical office of the Irish government all view this figure with a great deal of skepticism. When Apple books hundreds of billions of dollars’ worth of intellectual property through Dublin, it inflates Ireland’s GDP without having the same impact on the wages of Irish workers, the rent that Irish landlords charge, or the cost of a three-bedroom home for an Irish family living close to the city.
Ireland employs a completely other metric called Modified home Demand, which eliminates international distortions, to provide a clearer picture of what the home economy is actually doing. The most recent reading on that measure showed growth of 2.1%. solid. Not very impressive. About what you would anticipate from a well-run open economy negotiating a rather challenging international climate.
It is very difficult to overlook the discrepancy between the headline figure and actual experience in the housing crisis. Dublin has some of the highest rent rates in Europe, and the city’s high real estate costs have made homeownership unaffordable for many younger people, many of whom work in or close to the very IT sector that has made Ireland appear so prosperous on paper.
No GDP statistic, no matter how impressive, will reconcile the tension between the two facts that permeate Irish public discourse: the city that houses Google’s European headquarters and the place where a software engineer in their late twenties struggles to find an affordable apartment. The government is making investments in housing infrastructure and public transportation, but these are long-term fixes for an issue that seems urgent.
Fiscal concentration is the other structural risk. Corporate tax collections from a comparatively small number of large foreign-owned enterprises account for a significant portion of Irish government revenue. The income impact would be substantial if those businesses reorganize, move intellectual property, or lessen their Irish presence in response to international tax harmonization initiatives.

The Irish government appears to have a clear understanding of this; the creation of special savings and wealth funds to absorb excess business tax receipts is an intentional attempt to create a buffer against just that kind of situation. It’s really questionable if the cushion will be sufficiently large when tested. Grand Canal Dock’s structures won’t be demolished anytime soon. However, contrary to what the architecture implies, their profits are not fixed.
