Options
Young People's Trajectories through Irish Housing Booms and Busts: headship, housing and labour market access among the under 30s since the late 1960s
Author(s)
Date Issued
2012-10
Date Available
2013-11-13T09:09:02Z
Abstract
The economic, social and demographic history of the Republic of Ireland since
World War II is distinctive in western European terms. While many of her
neighbours experienced strong economic and population growth during the post
war decades, resulting in unprecedented prosperity for the generation born
during the post war baby boom, Ireland experienced economic stagnation and
population decline during the 1950s, punctuated by a period of growth in the
1960s and early 1970s, until the traditional pattern of economic stagnation was
reinstated in the 1980s (Kennedy et al 1988). This longstanding pattern of
economic under performance changed in the mid 1990s with the advent of the
‘Celtic Tiger’ economic boom and during the decade which followed Ireland’s
economic growth caught up with and then surpassed the western European
average, employment and household disposable income grew radically and the
Irish population expanded by 20 per cent (Clinch et al 2002).
World War II is distinctive in western European terms. While many of her
neighbours experienced strong economic and population growth during the post
war decades, resulting in unprecedented prosperity for the generation born
during the post war baby boom, Ireland experienced economic stagnation and
population decline during the 1950s, punctuated by a period of growth in the
1960s and early 1970s, until the traditional pattern of economic stagnation was
reinstated in the 1980s (Kennedy et al 1988). This longstanding pattern of
economic under performance changed in the mid 1990s with the advent of the
‘Celtic Tiger’ economic boom and during the decade which followed Ireland’s
economic growth caught up with and then surpassed the western European
average, employment and household disposable income grew radically and the
Irish population expanded by 20 per cent (Clinch et al 2002).
Type of Material
Book Chapter
Publisher
Routledge (Taylor & Francis)
Copyright (Published Version)
2013, individual chapters: the contributors
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
Journal
Forrest, R. and Ngai-Ming, Y. (eds.). Housing Young People: Transitions, Trajectories and Generational Fractures
ISBN
978-0-415-63335-2
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
File(s)
Loading...
Name
Norris_and_Winston_book_chapter_housing_young_people.pdf
Size
539.23 KB
Format
Adobe PDF
Checksum (MD5)
5567d6cca2ef70ac5d78c6866e353648
Owning collection
Mapped collections