Why is Google & Apple's HQ in this small country?

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 5 ноя 2022
  • Ireland has become a hub for Silicon Valley's biggest companies -- but why?
    Up Your Knowledge!
    ► Facebook: / uptin
    ► Instagram: / uptin
    ► Twitter: / uptin
    Watch some more of my videos!
    Why Amazon's HQ is in this tiny country
    • Why Amazon's HQ is in ...
    Why the Rich hide their money in Panama
    • Why the RICH hide thei...
    What China wants in Latin America
    • How China is taking ov...

Комментарии • 614

  • @rol1517
    @rol1517 Год назад +105

    I'm Irish and I'm emigrating because I can't afford to live here. It's terrible at the moment.

    • @TheInternetcord
      @TheInternetcord Год назад +2

      Join the club. Lived in UK after graduating, now in Spain. Ireland is damn expensive

    • @Dewaters65
      @Dewaters65 Год назад

      Get a job you scrote. Irelands a great place to live

    • @rol1517
      @rol1517 Год назад +4

      @@Dewaters65 that's nasty when you don't know anything about me.

    • @RazorMouth
      @RazorMouth Год назад +5

      You should reflect on where you look to find your job then.
      I'm on 65k and it's plenty.

    • @rol1517
      @rol1517 Год назад +4

      @@RazorMouth because that's a huge amount

  • @Jack-xl7lb
    @Jack-xl7lb Год назад +44

    English speaking country, highly educated people, young workforce, growing economy, low corporate tax, EU membership are just a few reasons why companies such as Google and Apple set up in Ireland.

    • @zVampiirePlatypus
      @zVampiirePlatypus Год назад +2

      10% of multinational employees in Ireland are actually Irish so it's just the tax really they hire people from outside eu to come here alot.

    • @houseoftyrell1544
      @houseoftyrell1544 Год назад

      The government and people being fooled with investment and status to look cool with all those big corporation there but it just same old capitalism.

    • @jamiegrant5955
      @jamiegrant5955 Год назад

      @@zVampiirePlatypus That's a complete lie.

    • @zVampiirePlatypus
      @zVampiirePlatypus Год назад

      @@jamiegrant5955 what's the % then since you apparently know what it is.

    • @doniehurley7634
      @doniehurley7634 9 месяцев назад

      Ireland has full employment go figure@@zVampiirePlatypus

  • @ianwynne5483
    @ianwynne5483 Год назад +51

    Hewlett Packard in France paid an effective tax of 1% even though their headline is 25%. There are always loopholes and derogations in every tax collection system.

    • @RazorMouth
      @RazorMouth Год назад +3

      People forget there is a big difference between gross and net profits. Companies can make a 10% gross profit but in fact make a negative net profit.

  • @omkarkulkarni9020
    @omkarkulkarni9020 Год назад +79

    Nice video in general but I think you missed a few parts
    - A tech graduate here in Dublin doesn’t earn $100k but they start at €35k-€45k.
    - A major factor for housing crisis is also the supply. You don’t see a lot of high rise buildings but a sprawling suburban area.
    - The housing cost is high not only in Dublin but other Irish cities as well. So the Bay Area comparison doesn’t make sense.
    - Apple is not even based in Dublin it’s based the second largest city in Cork.
    - The city never introduced a rent control so the landlords were free to ask however the amount for new rentals which has gotten out of hand. This in my opinion is also caused by landlords lobbying in the government to keep rent high.

    • @kurtpunchesthings2411
      @kurtpunchesthings2411 Год назад +4

      Ireland is kind of allergic to High Rise buildings look we don't even need to build 100 story appartment blocks but for example do you know how many 5 story apartments exist outside of Dublin? Yea very fucking few part of the solution to the housing crisis is building up some of the apartments that currently exist we need to stack more ontop of that that way you can fit more people Into a smaller area to help combat urban sprawl this is not perfect but it's one of the things that needs to happen

    • @overman2306
      @overman2306 Год назад

      Even if Ireland built houses on every last piece of land it would never keep up with the demand. The government wants to increase the population to 10 million by 2040.

    • @robertmoore67
      @robertmoore67 Год назад +1

      @@kurtpunchesthings2411 we are way too fucking proud of our front and back gardens and dublin as the youngest capital in europe needs to build upwards.

    • @lavienestpasunlongfleuvetr2559
      @lavienestpasunlongfleuvetr2559 Год назад

      You left out the fact that a lot of property has been gobbled up by greedy investors since the 2008 crash, leaving a lot less for people to buy, and the government has done nothing to curb their spending.
      Oh, and then there's the fact that without rent controls, and with poor tenants' rights, rents have been able to skyrocket waaay above wage increases.
      There are enough highly-paid tech and banking workers for the European Commission to be able to pretend that house-prices are in line with GDP, but they conveniently forget that they're totally unafordable for the average worker, and that GDP is skewed by the influx of highly-paid tech and banking workers.
      One estate agent recently said that his average renter was 33, continental European, working in tech, on a salary of €90k. Few locals can compete with that.
      The fact that Dublin now has a shortage of teachers because no one on a teacher's salary can afford to live or buy there without a second income or help from family, should tell you everything you need to know about Dublin's ridiculous housing market. It's for the mega-rich and no one else.

    • @overman2306
      @overman2306 Год назад

      @@lavienestpasunlongfleuvetr2559 The government is already too big and has too much power so more government intervention is just adding oil to the slippery slope we're already on.
      You don't have a right to live in Dublin. Most cities outside Dublin are not up to a high standard. Move there and build up those places. You're no different than all the humans from throughout history.
      We need less teachers, not more. Most people shouldn't even go to secondary school. It could even be pre-recorded. Secondary school should be for gifted kids.
      We also need less people who work in offices and more people who work in trades and engineering. We need to build the future, not cater to your concept of the 'average worker'.

  • @noelward9579
    @noelward9579 Год назад +90

    Apple did NOT setup in Ireland in the nineties, Apple Macintosh setup their first manufacturing facility ( I think only factory where they made anything themselves) outside the US in Cork in 1982, today they employ 6000 people at that factory.

    • @seanpadraigobrien1260
      @seanpadraigobrien1260 Год назад

      The guy is ignorant as hell. Hasn't the ability to even research basic information

    • @overman2306
      @overman2306 Год назад

      @Sean Padraig O Brien That's all content creators and journalists. You just know more about the subject so can spot the inaccuracies. Look up 'Gell-Mann Amnesia'.

    • @jeanjacques9980
      @jeanjacques9980 Год назад

      I remember Dell, they dumped Ireland for China greater profit margins, how many thousands lost their jobs in Limerick? Currently Ireland is doing well and long may they continue to do so, but they are subject to the whims big tech, here today gone tomorrow, although Apple have been in Cork for 40 years.

    • @overman2306
      @overman2306 Год назад +1

      ​@@jeanjacques9980 Ireland died in 2010 and was revived with a bailout. It's just called Ireland now, but it's not the same place anymore.

    • @jeanjacques9980
      @jeanjacques9980 Год назад

      @@overman2306 Big changes in Ireland not all for the best. I had no idea that Dublin is so overheated. Extremely tough on all those not earning €100K.

  • @anthonydowling3356
    @anthonydowling3356 Год назад +95

    Population of Dublin is over a million people ,not half a million as he said .Greater Dublin is said to have 1.3 million and growing rapidly .

    • @stoddard1953
      @stoddard1953 Год назад +1

      But I thought Ireland was small? /s

    • @anthonydowling3356
      @anthonydowling3356 Год назад +12

      @@stoddard1953 Not that small .Its around twice the size of the Netherlands .84 thousand Km sq versus 42 thousand Km sq

    • @Chingalo2006
      @Chingalo2006 Год назад +4

      Yeah I heard that misnomer too! A lot of negatives and pumped up narrative in this. We do have a seriously highly educated population here too. That was over looked!

    • @omgpotatos1
      @omgpotatos1 Год назад +4

      No he said Dublin city has 500k, Dublin county has 1.4 million and then the Greater Dublin Area has roughly 2 million people

    • @sl_721
      @sl_721 Год назад

      We are growing too fast. We have a housing crisis while we’re bringing more immigrants in

  • @pozel790
    @pozel790 Год назад +36

    You missed the actual main Google campus in Dublin mate. The building you claimed to be the main Google HQ is not. There’s another parallel road that has 5 more Google buildings which are bigger.

    • @mrmartin2079
      @mrmartin2079 Год назад +15

      It's obvious he did little research

  • @ramifridhi4038
    @ramifridhi4038 Год назад +47

    God bless ireland such a nice country , irish people are one of the most nicest people i have ever met love u from a tunisian living berlin

  • @francisconnellan350
    @francisconnellan350 Год назад +34

    I had to leave Dublin because of the increase in rent prices.I now live in Limerick there is a house shortge here too. The shortage of houses was not caused by the low corporate taxes but it did make it worse. Other countries in eastern European have even lower corporate taxes 10%.

    • @usandusonly32
      @usandusonly32 Год назад

      Ireland does not have a housing crisis, Ireland has a mass immigration crisis

    • @RazorMouth
      @RazorMouth Год назад

      We stopped building houses for 5 to 10 years..... Big cockup by the FG government, they balanced the books but forgot about the basics.

  • @neil.heffernan
    @neil.heffernan Год назад +58

    Some comments:
    Dublin's population is 1.17 million, not 500,000.
    The Housing Crisis is not caused by tech workers in cities. There is a severe shortage of housing everywhere in the country, including the rural areas hours away from any tech office.

    • @dand5829
      @dand5829 Год назад +4

      According to Wikipedia, the population of the city of Dublin is 554,000. So either Wikipedia is wrong or you’re talking about a different Dublin.

    • @neil.heffernan
      @neil.heffernan Год назад +11

      @@dand5829 Ah, that's the population of the Dublin City Council Area. Dublin is a single city, governed by four councils, as the county Council was divided in 1994. The city expands well outside the city council boundary and was split up to make it easier to govern.

    • @Luton-Mick
      @Luton-Mick Год назад

      All the property is being bought up then rented out exorbitantly by American venture capitalists aka cuckoo companies.

    • @keithcommins
      @keithcommins Год назад +1

      @@dand5829 Its 1.2 mill approx as Neil said.
      The area which counts as the council area (which I guess is the "historic" old boundaries of the city) is about half a mill, it doesn't include the surrounding areas, namely Fingal, Dun Laoghaire and South Dublin (which are absolutely part of Dublin too..)

    • @aislingnieochagain2967
      @aislingnieochagain2967 Год назад +2

      The population of Dublin is over 1.4million in 2022. Just ask one of those lovely Dubliners you met in your video. No one would count “Dublin city council” as the population of Dublin. Sure lots of the areas in Dublin City council aren’t particularly residential. They’re mixed business/commercial/residential areas. Outside Dublin City council is where most people live. (Unless you only count the tech bros who live in the docklands!

  • @gogovideo10
    @gogovideo10 Год назад +64

    As a Dubliner living in diaspora, I have mixed feelings on this..
    The housing crisis in Dublin is 100% the biggest challenge we’re facing.
    None of my friends in Dublin live alone, a lot of them still live with their parents. You say that it can cost €3000 for an apartment.. the reality is, it can cost a lot more than that. I saw an advertisement for a bedroom in a 3 bedroom apartment for €1575 a month. To put that into perspective, that’s more than 3 times the amount I pay to rent a 1 bedroom apartment in Northern Ireland.
    I had no choice but to leave Dublin if I wanted to have any quality of life. I was homeless more than once while living in Dublin, and it’s genuinely a struggle just to survive.
    I am angry that I can’t live in the place where I grew up. I’m angry that I can’t be around my friends & family. I’m angry that what’s stopping me from doing that, is big tech giants coming in and fucking up any possibility of me ever going home.
    The government are doing absolutely nothing to help, because the government are profiting massively off the back of the crisis. They’re profiting from the tech companies, and then profiting through purchasing rental properties.
    Essentially, we get fucked in both ends.

    • @MsMinoula
      @MsMinoula Год назад +1

      I am only passing by to say I feel for you.

    • @aspenade
      @aspenade Год назад +6

      Living in diaspora!! You need to research the definition of the word.
      Your living 100 miles from home in your own country and btw, before big tech came to Ireland year on year for generations the Irish had to emigrate to earn a living that they could afford to go back home and buy or build a house.
      Lastly... Belfast might not be Dublin but your home Mo Chara.

    • @gogovideo10
      @gogovideo10 Год назад +5

      @@aspenade I’m living 200km from home, and I tell you, that’s a long way to be away from everyone you know, everyone you love, all the places you spent your time. I haven’t been home in 3 years, I can’t even afford to take a day trip.
      And no, this isn’t the same country where I grew up. I know the Irish in the North would love to see it that way, but everything is different here. I’ve had my medical care stopped because under the NHS treatment guidelines, they don’t think I need it. I have to call my GP hundreds of times to get an appointment, as opposed to just turning up and taking a seat in the waiting room as I’ve done with my GP my entire life. I use a different currency, I use a different bank, and the people here aren’t the same as the people I grew up around. I have tonnes of friends in Dublin, if I turn up to any of my old haunts, I will run into them.
      Here however, I have no strong friendships after years. I’ve tried my best, but people here just aren’t as friendly. Might have something to do with the civil war that happened here & didn’t happen where I grew up, who knows.
      So yes, I am living in diaspora. I’m living a lonely existence hundreds of miles from home, wishing I could be there.

    • @irenemax3574
      @irenemax3574 Год назад +1

      @@gogovideo10 I feel disappointed that you're not having a great time here in the North. Do you like music? Alison McGrath is playing at the American Bar tomorrow. Saturday 26th November. There's a place that has a nice friendly easy-going crowd.

    • @gogovideo10
      @gogovideo10 Год назад +1

      @@irenemax3574 I’m disappointed by it too, because I’d always grown up feeling like this was just another part of Ireland, but my experience is very different.
      Don’t get me wrong, I’m glad to still live in Ireland at least. I can’t afford to rent anywhere in the Republic & still live alone (which is my absolute dealbreaker, I need my own space that’s not just 4 walls and a bed) so for that I’m also grateful, but I have no community here. I’ve lived here for the better part of 3 years, still have no friends here.
      I’m also gay, and where I live there isn’t even a gay bar, but I do hear people shouting homophobic slurs from the street below my flat every weekend, and the only gay bar that did exist here was burned down in a hate crime in 2019.
      So although I’m grateful, I’m also isolated, I’m lonely, I’m a long way from home, and it feels as though I’ve turned my clock back 50 years. It’s not the Ireland I grew up in.

  • @colmgrimes2996
    @colmgrimes2996 Год назад +72

    I have a few thoughts as a person who worked in a tech company in Ireland and maybe more importantly some from here. I will share them here I guess! To be honest I found your video well shot! But overly simplistic and its trying to compare the Bay Area housing issue to Dublins. Fair enough but its ignoring all the other bigger factors for the issue of housing in Dublin.
    * Apple is referenced in the video quite a bit, Apple did not base themselves in Dublin. They built their main campus in one of the more disadvantaged areas of Cork City.
    * Population of Dublin City metropolitan area > 1million people. Unsure why you would use the Census population of the Inner city area. this area does not extend even as far as the ring road motorway (M50) that is the main artery of traffic that has to be crossed to enter the City.
    * The Corporate Tax Rate is a massive factor for attracting Multinationals to Ireland. However this does not mean all of this investment in Ireland or its revenues would be otherwise in US. These are European HQ’s. It is just as likely they would be based in another European city as Ireland
    * The 13B$ Tax settlement that European Courts are pursuing Apple for is less related to Irelands Corporate tax rate of 12.5% and more directly due to what was called the “double Irish” tax treaty. - Meaning you could base your European company’s Campus here but then subsequently move/locate IP in another - usually tax havens in the Caribbean like Caymans or British virgin islands etc.
    * This practice was ceased by Apple in 2014.
    * The last Point I would make is this Video is comparing the cost of housing in Dublin to the cost of housing in the Bay Area of Sanfrancisco and implying that the tech workers in Dublin being so numerous have caused housing prices to soar in Dublin.
    That is quite the leap. Where as people earning more money in Ireland and Dublin causes an obvious increase in the money going into the housing market. It ignores the other side of any market - the supply! The housing crisis in Ireland is predominantly an issue of supply as well as other factors such as City planning. You will have noticed the height of buildings in Dublin while you were there. Little or no High rise.
    Apartments, high rise, Condominium buildings are unpopular, less desired and were for the most part rejected or ruled against in Irish cities during previous economic booms. That is changing somewhat.
    But this has led to inner city urban decay and outer city urban sprawl.
    Ireland is trying to move to a more high density residential building.
    However the pandemic and global supply chain backlog the world has experienced are huge factors to building housing in Ireland.
    There is also the Irish cultural factor of owning your own home vs renting which Ireland has deep historical psychological scarring with.
    The other factor not mentioned is the speed or rate of economic growth Ireland has experienced in the last 20-30 years. Not to mention demographics such as the high rate of third level education providing a ready made workforce and its younger population than other European populations.
    I think you are trying to hard to make this the same issue as the Bay Area housing issue.

    • @weirdo4801
      @weirdo4801 Год назад +1

      Totally agree with you

    • @afarro
      @afarro Год назад

      So there has been a flow of high earners new tech workers into Dublin and there is a shortage of housing supply. I don’t see any leap here to expect house prices to soar. And guess what, this is exactly like the situation in Bay Area. It seems you are trying hard to differentiate it. And if you are a local not owning assets you are screwed. Basic capitalism.

    • @Maurazio
      @Maurazio Год назад +1

      in the bay area the problem is also the supply, actually it's the only real problem

    • @matthewlynch9331
      @matthewlynch9331 Год назад +4

      I agree this video was fully of inaccuracies

    • @ahlads
      @ahlads Год назад

      Couldn’t have said it better myself. It seemed like the video was trying to make conclusions based on a certain agenda.

  • @GaryWalshDublin
    @GaryWalshDublin Год назад +13

    Low corporation tax, English speaking country, well educated work-force, access to EU market- its an easy explanation for this. also Greater Dublin area is 1.6 million people

  • @timlinator
    @timlinator Год назад +7

    I'm Irish American duel citizen working as a tech professional in Silicon Valley, California but for a Dublin, Ireland based company and just returned from a visit there. Ireland is the Silicon Valley of Europe but that has caused the same problems we see in California for the same reasons high housing costs and more homeless.

  • @dignamshane
    @dignamshane Год назад +7

    Funnily enough more Americans are employed by Irish companies in America than American companies employ in Ireland.

  • @df1985
    @df1985 Год назад +7

    The meta building you showed isn’t the campus, it’s not finished yet but absolutely huge. LinkedIn have a massive new campus under construction too. TikTok are about to take a number of buildings also.

  • @dc9856
    @dc9856 Год назад +11

    Apples first proper factory was set up in cork in the early 1980s . The Irish government fully backed them from the start.thats why they are here.and as well, cork is a rocking spot says an offaly man

  • @moviesunified6746
    @moviesunified6746 Год назад +10

    This also true for Luxemburg, its a small country but it has all big corporations Head Quarters.

  • @Skill_Issue92
    @Skill_Issue92 Год назад +51

    Moving things overseas to avoid taxes is what the US is built on 😂

    • @WanderingExistence
      @WanderingExistence Год назад +1

      We threw an absolute fit over a couple percent on tea...

  • @aspenade
    @aspenade Год назад +60

    Don't forget to mention that one of the reasons multinationals choose Dublin is that Ireland has one of the highest education rates in Europe.
    In October 2022 Ireland has been ranked third for third level education among the 38 member countries of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD)

    • @VARMOT123
      @VARMOT123 Год назад +3

      It is a tax haven . There are dozens of them and they are leaches on humanity

    • @kurtpunchesthings2411
      @kurtpunchesthings2411 Год назад +2

      Wow we have come a long way from a time when the British didn't allow catholics to get education to being a top ranking education country

    • @declanfitzpatrick6747
      @declanfitzpatrick6747 Год назад +4

      I live beside DCU. A huge number are not Irish. Maybe more than fifty percent are from abroad. UCD the same .tcd also.. a. Lot of young Irish people get left behind

    • @chrisburnby62
      @chrisburnby62 Год назад +1

      @@declanfitzpatrick6747
      7000 people on 7 floors. Only one floor operates in English. That is where the “ highly educated “ Mary Harney kids operate from. Amazing how monikers stick, most of them have their mommies tie their shoe laces!

  • @mathieunorry
    @mathieunorry Год назад +142

    As an Irish person I can tell you categorically the main reason big tech is in Ireland is they pay exceptionally low tax on their billions. The fact we're an English speaking country is a benefit but not the deal breaker. The downsides of having tens of thousands of highly paid tech employees in Dublin is the upward pressure it's placed on rental prices which have become extortionate for such a small city. Ireland has been warned its over reliance on tech tax is a timebomb, because when tech collapses it will leave a massive hole in Irish tax revenue, the upside is rents will fall.

    • @rafanadir6958
      @rafanadir6958 Год назад +3

      As far as I know, Ireland's corporate tax rate is 10%. In Hungary is 9%.

    • @ipamaj1gt
      @ipamaj1gt Год назад +6

      @@rafanadir6958 Then why aren’t tech firms in Hungary ?

    • @GreedAndLust
      @GreedAndLust Год назад +8

      @@rafanadir6958 Ireland’s Corporation Tax is currently 12.5%, but as of recently, we have to adhere to the “global” corporate tax rate. Therefore we must raise it by 2.5% in the beginning of 2023.

    • @eoinoconnell185
      @eoinoconnell185 Год назад +6

      @@rafanadir6958 Now 15%. Still 12.5% for small companies.

    • @paulkirton8945
      @paulkirton8945 Год назад +4

      Your man just said all that.

  • @shivendrasingh4631
    @shivendrasingh4631 Год назад +8

    Ireland has built great colleges which offer cheap and good education compared to us. They are spending a lot of money on education related to science and technology. Germany is doing the same with its universities attracting talent through zero tuition fees. Tech companies will move there because of concentration of talent and cheap tax rates. They have built a great ecosystem even if it increases its tax rates to 15% it will be hard for companies to relocate elsewhere.

    • @shivendrasingh4631
      @shivendrasingh4631 Год назад

      @Laurence O'Connor best of luck. I am also considering Germany and Ireland for my masters degree since us universities are too expensive

  • @martidonegal1
    @martidonegal1 Год назад +6

    We need these companies. They should pay more tax. But Ireland has a lot more to offer than just low taxes. The housing crisis is a disgrace and needs to be sorted.

  • @alanmetcalfe5294
    @alanmetcalfe5294 Год назад +2

    In addition to the large office centres, there are numerous Data centres related to some if not all of these large Tech companies.

  • @raygreen5926
    @raygreen5926 Год назад +10

    Yes, a very interesting insight into Dublin. It's an amazing city in many ways. A happening place ☘🇮🇪☘

  • @gunerguner3260
    @gunerguner3260 Год назад +2

    Congrats on 100k bro I knew you would hit it when I subscribed at like 20k

  • @GicaForta
    @GicaForta Год назад

    Great work. Just discovered you. Good journalism 👍 love the subjects and the subject flow formats for on-screen information consumption.

  • @ARcreationsTV
    @ARcreationsTV Год назад +5

    Recently emigrated from Ireland because of this, absolutely no houses to buy at a decent price and forget renting there it’s dead money, shame really

    • @anthonym3351
      @anthonym3351 Год назад

      Were you able to buy a house where you moved to?

    • @gregorytreacy7085
      @gregorytreacy7085 Год назад +1

      I'd love to emigrate myself but haven't a clue where to start, I lost my job on Saturday and have no incentive to work here anymore, imagine if it was easy to look for a job in Belgium, Netherlands, Austria, Germany for English speakers. I hope it is cause I wouldn't mind looking somewhere there because it's frankly much more cheaper then in Ireland

  • @RichardUpstanding
    @RichardUpstanding Год назад +4

    Here in Ireland people will complain about everything.
    These tech companies provide a huge number of jobs, but people carry on like they’re villains. Perhaps they’d like to go back to the ghost town that Dublin was a few years ago, and perhaps they’d like to be unemployed instead.
    If we think things are expensive now, they’ll be even more expensive when we’re unemployed.
    Ireland is also a wealthy country already, so the lack of income from the corporate taxes is not the problem, and it’s way better for us to have more companies providing jobs for us and paying 12.5% than having way less paying 15% or a bit more.
    Unless of course we’d rather live on government subsidies and grants.
    The cost of rent etc is not all about tech companies or the rate of tax they pay. It’s as much a function of the supply; which has nothing to do with them.
    Their being here is not a problem, it’s an opportunity. An opportunity to build more houses, create more jobs , attract top professionals etc all of which are good for us.
    Yes there are some tough times to get there, but it’s a normal part of a cycle. We need to complain less and crack on with making things better. We need to stop blaming companies that provide us with jobs and taxes we wouldn’t otherwise have.

    • @overman2306
      @overman2306 Год назад

      Building more is a catch 22 because the government will give the houses to new arrivals and the problem will be back to square one. Supply can never keep up with demand.

    • @RichardUpstanding
      @RichardUpstanding Год назад

      @@overman2306 I wasn’t referring to building houses at all, but yes the housing issue is also very complicated.

  • @sngs9565
    @sngs9565 Год назад +2

    Really thought, in the beginning....it was CNBC International with Uptin, only realised later, it was Uptin channel! Truly, a memory lane! Nice, Uptin!

  • @papi8659
    @papi8659 Год назад +6

    Well done Ireland, very impressive

  • @bufordmaddogtannen
    @bufordmaddogtannen Год назад +45

    In a nutshell: the Irish government sucks must of its taxes out of regular tax payers and medium / small businesses, while multi national companies can fully enjoy all the benefits of a 12.5% corporate tax rate without actually paying it. The difference with medium and small businesses is that entities like Google can also use legal loopholes and pay as little tax as possible.

    • @diarmuidbuckley6638
      @diarmuidbuckley6638 Год назад

      Shukran.

    • @johnmc3862
      @johnmc3862 Год назад +1

      All the biggest online companies pay way too little tax.

    • @stephenmurphy2212
      @stephenmurphy2212 Год назад

      The current government needs to go. I want Mary-Lou for Taoiseach. Sinn Fein should’ve won the last election but it was stolen (and I mean actually stolen not stolen as Trump would put it)! 😡

    • @thomascoady3782
      @thomascoady3782 Год назад

      @@stephenmurphy2212 SF like the present FF/FG//Green government and all the western governments are also controlled by the EU and the WEF. If they get in they will be even more communist and totalitarian.
      No mention of the high cost of housing and apartment rents being caused by the unfettered influx of so-called ‘refugees’ from everywhere in the world and getting preference over the unsuspecting naive local Irish with regards to free housing by our rogue government.

    • @johnduggan8656
      @johnduggan8656 Год назад +1

      All trading companies in Ireland pay tax at 12.5%, not just multi nationals

  • @pauldoogan903
    @pauldoogan903 Год назад +4

    Biggest think driving up rent prices is also vulture funds buying up entire estates and massive amounts of apartments.

  • @xxnektkillazxx961
    @xxnektkillazxx961 Год назад +1

    Ιf you made a documentary with content like this I would really pay to see it. Really well done, keep up the good work.

  • @Expatemirati
    @Expatemirati Год назад +1

    Nice video.. 👍👍 Hoping to see more videos like this..

    • @uptin
      @uptin  Год назад

      Thank you! Will do :)

  • @Bmg9bmg9
    @Bmg9bmg9 Год назад +3

    What a great insight. Great vid.

    • @uptin
      @uptin  Год назад

      Glad you enjoyed it!

  • @alihabib7712
    @alihabib7712 Год назад +1

    Wow, I was always wondering why I was getting Irish Invoices for my Oracle Cloud Servers setup in Ashburn, USA. This was very informative...

  • @alcoyne3333333333333
    @alcoyne3333333333333 Год назад +5

    Thanks for highlighting 👍 we have Thousands of homeless Irish people even some with Jobs .

  • @MrEnterainment
    @MrEnterainment Год назад +1

    This is a very good video but there was at least 2 mistakes with the subtitles when you were interviewing that nice Irish guy in that cafe (who didn't really have a thick Irish accent) 😆

    • @kieranmurray
      @kieranmurray Год назад

      No. Because he did not know what he was talking about!

  • @eoghanfinnegan6119
    @eoghanfinnegan6119 Год назад +6

    Not a lot research went into this video, first of all Dublin has 1 million people not 500,000 . According to an OECD report Ireland is one the most tax compliant countries, other countries in Europe that have a higher taxation rate end up taking in much less than 12.5% . Its why Europe has never pressured Ireland into changing it....... France, Germany, and the Netherlands would be hit harder if countries were forced to into collecting the actual tax rates

  • @andrewareva4605
    @andrewareva4605 Год назад +4

    There's a focus on US missing out on taxes, but I believe it's mostly Europe that is losing out. Basically Apple Italy doesn't have to pay taxes to Italy at Italy's rate and just pay to Ireland at Ireland's rate.

    • @kurtpunchesthings2411
      @kurtpunchesthings2411 Год назад

      If you remember the Apple tax story long story short they technically owned ireland 13 billion dollars in unpaid taxes the why they didn't pay it at the time is our government let them away with it to encourage more investment in Ireland basically we had at one point a much lower corporate tax rate than most of the EU as you can imagine this pissed off alot of people and we eventually caved and agreed to raise it

    • @liamfuller7898
      @liamfuller7898 Год назад +2

      @@kurtpunchesthings2411 A couple of corrections; - Technically Apple did not owe Ireland €13B. In 2016 the EU Commission fined Apple €13B. Apple appealed & in July 2020, the European General Court struck down EU tax decision as illegal, ruling in favour of Apple. The EU Commission can appeal the decision to the ECJ.

  • @sirculito15893
    @sirculito15893 Год назад +2

    Damn Uptin, amazing work. Your content quality has gone to netflix documentary levels

    • @uptin
      @uptin  Год назад +1

      wow thanks, I loved making it so I am glad you enjoyed it.

  • @kuba_sw
    @kuba_sw Год назад +2

    Funfact: Even the trash bins in Dublin docklands are unique, they have gps, solar panels and most of them have their own WiFi.

  • @Ari-lu5ve
    @Ari-lu5ve Год назад +2

    Great video! Can you make a video on San Francisco? Something like "the rise and fall of San Francisco", or "how property crime and homelessness have gotten out of hand in San Francisco" or "why real estate is so expensive in San Francisco"

  • @Neoscarface6342
    @Neoscarface6342 Год назад +1

    I never though of Dublin being like this, thanks for videoing the city and sharing this video

  • @Conorguill
    @Conorguill Год назад +3

    It’s worth saying that the real tax savings come from arbitrage between systems rather than a low Irish rate

  • @om-qz7kp
    @om-qz7kp Год назад +1

    @Uptin, you need to make a follow up on this following the recent layoffs of the big tech companies

  • @garybarrett4881
    @garybarrett4881 Год назад

    2:48 There is also a Menlo Park in Galway on the west coast of Ireland, I think it’s actually twinned with the USA place

  • @azaanshah6378
    @azaanshah6378 Год назад +5

    Amazing and extremely educational video as always!

  • @Conorguill
    @Conorguill Год назад +2

    Very few grads at tech firms are earning anything like 100k a year

    • @marky1974
      @marky1974 Год назад +1

      Ive been a programmer for 20 years and im earning low 70s..so yeah bullshit

  • @putra4101
    @putra4101 Год назад +7

    People being angry about why these company didn't paid in America's taxes...
    Bruh, your system does what it exactly doing, they (the company) just adapt to it.
    And by all means, living in America being harder, policies are sh*t to reform, politics are polarized, and more people hoping for civil war rather making a good things, all of that sh*t make company run for a more stable and manageable country.
    Btw love your video Uptin,
    I also hope you had a story from the council, and what they do for housing council. 🙂

    • @ps_pol_xbox9036
      @ps_pol_xbox9036 Год назад +4

      Not to mention high crime rates and rise in homelessness in major US cities where many of these tech companies are located also force them to move to protect their workers from being assaulted.

    • @izoyt
      @izoyt Год назад

      Bruh, what are you on? only reason all megabrands have settled their headquarters in scotland is due to more or less illegal (that was part of investigation and lawsit by eu commission, if i'm not mistaken) agreement/legislation done by irish government to lower rate on corporate tax as low as under 1%. And not only that, this "benefit" was available to more or less foreign mega-brands etc (mentioned in the video) only. Naturally, they are more than happy to invest there, building facilities, get it labour etc to help them exploit this system even further.
      It is double lost in the end, looking at money lost in taxes. First of course is america, but secondly are all eu member states, where this brands have business network of selling their products, where all trade/income goes concentrated to Ireland only (again, not state, but income tax), where even that is not paid by regular, but much lowered rate (practically zero till recently), so ireland loose that, also.
      Can you comprehend that, bruh?

  • @brillo86
    @brillo86 Год назад +8

    Last time I was in Dublin the homeless problem was absolutely shocking and that was 10 year ago. Can't imagine what its like now.

    • @marky1974
      @marky1974 Год назад +1

      A lot of the homeless have drug and drink issues..there were lots of places outside Dublin..we've housed 1000s of ukrainians..

    • @mintcrisp94
      @mintcrisp94 Год назад +5

      @@marky1974 There isn't "lots" of places outside Dublin. Rent is sky high every where, and with minimal properties to rent, and as someone who works with Irelands homeless I can tell you that most are on the streets from pressure due to being unable to find housing. The government found the ability to house the Ukrainians because it was convenient for them, they'd rather see the Irish die in the streets.
      Even now, in Cork, they are building a massive 250 unit building to house the Ukrainians. In the same spot mind you, that was previously denied development for cheap apartments for lone renters. The reason given was that the shit-hole next door Telus said that "it was more of a business area" and the council went a long with it. Despite the fact it was built beside the residential buildings.
      There are only about 600 properties available to rent right now in the entire nation, most rents costing well in excess of over 60% of a persons income, if not 80%.

    • @gregorytreacy7085
      @gregorytreacy7085 Год назад

      11500 thousand at the moment or so

  • @markdillon9588
    @markdillon9588 Год назад +2

    Other points - Brexit made companies relocate as it was more cost effective but Ireland has less cost effective trading with Britain one of its highest trading partners, we have a highly educated and hard working work force....no Irish person sees the result of any taxes we get...only benefit is jobs and after musk and the rest of the tech industry this week it's not exactly stable

  • @rajeshsatwah2687
    @rajeshsatwah2687 Год назад

    @uptin - The current metro area population of Dublin in 2022 is 1,256,000, a 1.13% increase from 2021. The metro area population of Dublin in 2021 was 1,242,000, a 1.14% increase from 2020.

  • @picadosinferno
    @picadosinferno Год назад

    I live in Dublin and far away from city center, I think the solution here is better transportation and more housing outside of the hot areas. People working from home has eased it a lot but still much more needs to be done.

  • @forwardslash1486
    @forwardslash1486 Год назад +2

    I work in tech in Dublin and still can't afford rent or to buy

  • @soghepardo
    @soghepardo Год назад

    Amazing video 🎉🎉🎉

    • @uptin
      @uptin  Год назад

      Thank you 🤗

  • @Nutrient16
    @Nutrient16 Год назад

    0:15 where is this in dublin?

  • @groslait7814
    @groslait7814 Год назад +3

    i once bought google phone from london instead it shipped from dublin

  • @jpablo700
    @jpablo700 Год назад +1

    A novel concept. Require jobs and tax rates to the portion of where sales and margin is made by company.

  • @troberts235
    @troberts235 Год назад +1

    It is indeed a crazy situation. Irish governments have gone out of their way to attract these huge global companies to Ireland yet are not able to build houses, apartments in Dublin, not only to accommodate the employees but Dubliners, in general. The current government, comprising of the three political parties of Fianna Fail, Fine Gael and The Green party have been a total disaster, not least for the housing situation in Dublin, in particular, which not only has become significantly worse under their watch but is now the worst it has ever been. Micheal Martin has been an utter disgrace and an unmitigated disaster as a Taoiseach(Prime minister).

  • @mohamedakram-sd4kv
    @mohamedakram-sd4kv Год назад

    How about brand & graphic Design Also interior and soft decoration Design business or jobs in luxumbourg.
    please kindy advice.
    Thanks

  • @aa7830
    @aa7830 Год назад +1

    Ireland's housing crisis is like shooting yourself in the foot. Now the tech companies suffer from skilled worker shortages, and if you wanna go there, you might not be able to rent a place. Not just because of the extreme renting price, but because there is not a single one physically available. Also, which is not spoken about, the renting terms are like in a 3rd world country. Now that this crisis that has been going on for long years was now worsened after accepting refugees, which added even more pressure to the system at all levels. This is just sad for a country like this. Having no regulations and politicians profiting off a 'crisis' leads to social disaster.

  • @noreenquinn3844
    @noreenquinn3844 Год назад +6

    A young, educated friendly work force, good intellectual property protection, low corruption, English speaking, an EU country, low corporation tax are among the reasons.

  • @gerardwylie7956
    @gerardwylie7956 Год назад

    Woo you're in Ireland hit me up for a city tour

  • @michaeljames3912
    @michaeljames3912 Год назад +1

    The guy said little studio, not nail studio lol

  • @yl95
    @yl95 Год назад +1

    Love this video

  • @lewiswalsh597
    @lewiswalsh597 Год назад +3

    Dublin is a bit more then .5 million people. It's more along 1.5 - 2 million

  • @tristankawatsuma8962
    @tristankawatsuma8962 Год назад

    I just saw the first part of the video and thought the Asian version of Ireland would be Japan. It seems like the Asian country with the largest western market. Then I was shocked when I read that it was actually Singapore. Guess it’s cool Japan had about a 30% corporate tax rate instead of Singapore’s 17%, though Japan did have a 42% corporate tax rate at the start of the century and it was just last year the rate fell to 29%, so best temper that cool feeling. Still, it’s higher than America’s corporate tax rate and Europe. Though the true winners of highest corporate tax rate would have to be the rest of Asia and South America and Africa, who have plenty of personal and justifiable reasons to tax the hell out of corporations.

  • @mesh4801
    @mesh4801 Год назад +2

    Fair game if you asked me. This is what an open economy looks like, enjoy the benefits but don't sob about the disadvantages, it's not always a win win situation!

  • @adrianduggan4739
    @adrianduggan4739 Год назад +1

    This video is outdated - Ireland has already agreed to up its corporation tax to 15% in line with a deal made between the EU and the OECD minimum tax rate. The reason that hasn’t been implemented is because other countries in Europe are threatening to block it. We’re the most highly educated workforce in Europe. No other country in Europe has over 85% of their workforce having a university degree. We have upwards of 90% with a degree. We also speak English exceptionally well, we also are highly connected through air travel, being less than 2 hours away from Brussels, London and Paris, not to mention that our flights to the US enter and operate as domestic flights when leaving from Dublin because we’re the only country in Europe to have customs pre clearance on our soil. The housing crisis is so much more deep than the fact that we have a huge tech industry. We have a strong economy, that means net immigration. The world is growing increasingly unstable, which means more refugees, were the only country in the EU that speaks English, anyone with an EU passport who wants to learn English is now coming to live here. Our colleges are increasingly international, housing isn’t being built at the pace it needs to be and it hasn’t for the past 12 years, and we have a government that is happy to let the market fix the problem - which isn’t working. Yes the tax rate is attractive, but as an American to come over here and say that Dublin is like San Francisco and it’s problems are the same is just naive, particularly given you’ve interviewed only two people, out of a city which has a metro population of over 1.5 million.

  • @Moose546
    @Moose546 7 месяцев назад

    It’s weird watching this video seeing places I’ve been before Ireland is such a small country 🇮🇪

  • @moozillamoo2109
    @moozillamoo2109 Год назад +1

    Because corporate tax just pushes manufacturing and HQing overseas. This is not hard to understand.

  • @buddymacbuddington
    @buddymacbuddington Год назад

    We also have alot of highly skilled tech people though the tax incentive would be the main contributing factor I worked for Google for a while

  • @bec8635
    @bec8635 Год назад

    it's also funny (not rlly) by the docks about couple minutes away there is many council estates funded by government

  • @Buildbeautiful
    @Buildbeautiful Год назад +1

    The city of london only has 10 thousand people most of greater london is in neighbouring counties

  • @anthonylangton3664
    @anthonylangton3664 Год назад +1

    November corporation tax €28 Billion, much higher than expected.
    More for the Sovereign wealth fund (SWF rainy day fund) and one of expenditure.
    2023 the government has €2850.00 to spare for each Man, Woman & child after expenditure including securing Money in SWF.

  • @opencurtin
    @opencurtin Год назад

    Dublins population is 1.5 million, Apple is based in Cork city a small city of 250k people it’s been in Cork city since 1980 , there was a time when Apple nearly went bust but of course it survived and stuck with Cork ever since.

  • @bikeman9899
    @bikeman9899 5 месяцев назад

    Don't forget, the major reason US firms keep money abroad. The US tax code does not tax corporations as long as they don't repatriate the money to the US. This rule is different for individual US taxpayers who are taxed on their worldwide income. So, yes, the IRL tax regime is very competitive in the EU, but fundamentally this story reflects US tax policy.

  • @dublingooner4012
    @dublingooner4012 Год назад

    The guy said "little studio" not "nail studio" lol

  • @cammysmith7562
    @cammysmith7562 Год назад +3

    Northern Ireland has seen a huge surge in ROI people moving to cities like Belfast. Most of my neighbours have moved as they can’t afford to live down south anymore and instead just get the train and travel to Dublin.

    • @OzzyM1998
      @OzzyM1998 Год назад

      Yep I'm thinking of moving up north from Louth. It would allow me to afford a place on my own rather than just a room!

  • @DeadHedgehogs
    @DeadHedgehogs Год назад

    There is currently 1.5 million people in Dublin not half a million

  • @od9694
    @od9694 Год назад +4

    The pharmacetical industry is possibly bigger 9 out of 10 of the world's largest pharmaceutical companies have bases in Ireland well spread out across the country

  • @MegaCrispy1
    @MegaCrispy1 Год назад

    Go to any European capital and you will see similar residential rents so that point is invalid in my opinion. A bigger problem is the city planning and limits on apartment block heights

  • @pauldoyle4250
    @pauldoyle4250 Год назад

    The current metro area population of Dublin in 2022 is 1,256,000, not 1/2 million

  • @sciwater1642
    @sciwater1642 Год назад

    There's corporate tax of 30 percents which one of the highest here, we have individual tax base on income , it's hard ..what's the way..small services and coding systems.
    Why for the development

  • @gregorytreacy7085
    @gregorytreacy7085 Год назад +1

    How many of their employees are actually irish seems a lot of foreign blow ins are working for them and increasing are cost of living ten fold as a result

  • @LeMerch
    @LeMerch Год назад

    Dublin has a population of 1.4 million (2 million in the metro area) not half a million people.

  • @liamot
    @liamot Год назад +1

    Tech workers have little to do with the housing crisis. We stopped building social housing in the 80s. We ignore large scale dereliction and vacancies of properties. We do nothing to control short term rentals. We incentivise international REITs to come in, buy up chunks of the market and charge extortionate rates.
    Gentrification of historically working class areas of the city pushing people out is a problem but the biggest cause is terrible economic policy by successive governments.

  • @leoesharkey1
    @leoesharkey1 Год назад +3

    This is a simplistic analysis, without nearly enough basic research done. Tut,tut. Ireland has the highest standard of education in Europe and is amongst the highest in the world for education levels, it is the only country in the EU with a similar Common Law legal system to the US, it is the only English language country in the EU, and the OECD corporate tax changes make the tax advantage a non-issue. You have missed out completely on the fact that US Pharma has even greater levels of investment in the country. Just nowhere deep enough in your research, and missing many factors in your analysis. Yes there are growing pains, but Ireland's economy is based on agriculture, tourism, services (financial services mainly) pharma and IT, it will continue to grow through the recession, and prosperity is an easier problem to accommodate than poverty...

    • @leoesharkey1
      @leoesharkey1 Год назад

      Plus greater Dublin has 2.4 million people now, and the country as a whole has 5.2 million people...

    • @leoesharkey1
      @leoesharkey1 Год назад

      @@treborsirrah7916 No, the majority language there is Maltese. I have been there many times.

  • @kebbandong9762
    @kebbandong9762 Год назад +3

    Who thought it was going to be a video about Luxembourg

  • @satelliteBM
    @satelliteBM Год назад +1

    Quality 💥💨

  • @03085716
    @03085716 Год назад +1

    Dublins population is 1.2 million not "half a million"

  • @Koruntuscharleyprinshel7
    @Koruntuscharleyprinshel7 2 месяца назад

    Currently population of Ireland is 0. Only one person "lived" there. Zahid Hussain of 196 Kings, Chorlton cum Hardy, Manchester, m21 0xx formerly known as Khalifa Abu Bakher al Siddique

  • @eastcorkcheeses6448
    @eastcorkcheeses6448 Год назад

    They could easily be tax based in Ireland without having thousands of employees ,
    Apple is tax based out of an office in Dublin , but they employ thousands of staff In Cork ..

  • @mattdayman9632
    @mattdayman9632 Год назад

    Correction you actually where not outside the Meta campus the campus is in ballsbridge not grand canal dock!

  • @Secret19977
    @Secret19977 Год назад

    The uk should be putting the corp tax rate at 11.5%. You’d think others would lower their tax rate in order to catch Ireland up when it comes to attractive investment

  • @BobbyReborn
    @BobbyReborn Год назад +1

    Love your tech videos. Please keep em coming!!

    • @mrmartin2079
      @mrmartin2079 Год назад

      This is far from a tech video 😂🙄

  • @clearskies
    @clearskies Год назад

    Guinness Storehouse is not the docklands lol

  • @brianwhelan5382
    @brianwhelan5382 Год назад

    The population of the greater Dublin area is a million and a quarter, Ireland used to have the highest rate of house ownership in the world. In the 60s Ireland was the second poorest country in western Europe, none of these technological companies existed in Ireland till the early nineties when Intel built their chip plant in Leixlip Kildare. It would be great if a lot on non nationals left as the change in Irelands demographics has happened in such a short time it has distorted our country. many techies working in tech area are not Irish, there are many other issues which are nearing boiling point in Ireland such as government insistence in bringing endless fakegees with no vetting of any kind. The government are gone rogue and the opposition is no different. I wouldn't be surprised if we don't have a revolution in this country within the next 5 years.