Interesting...looks like a nice place to live. One has to wonder if those were people who might have originally brought their wealth to the US.
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/14610533/from/RS.5/>>>snip
Tracing the country's spectacular rise from scenic basket case to economic powerhouse, Ireland's storied green fields are now among the most sought-after in Europe. The property boom has reached from one end of the island to the other, with home values on average soaring by 270 percent in the last decade, according to the government, one of the world's fastest rates. The average Irish house now goes for about $450,000; in Dublin, the capital, the figure exceeds $600,000.
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Fifteen years ago, Ireland had double-digit interest rates, stagnant growth and so few jobs that youths were migrating to the United States and elsewhere; homes were exceedingly affordable. Today, interest rates are rising but remain at just over 4 percent. Many of the Irish who left have returned, joined by a huge flow of Eastern Europeans moving here, all of whom are looking for places to live.
Low corporate tax rates, a highly educated, English-speaking population and a strategic location at the edge of the European Union have led to massive foreign investment in manufacturing and services. Year after year, the economy has expanded at rates envied by most other European countries.
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