City dwellers have higher incomes than people living in countryside, CSO finds
Former taoiseach Leo Varadkar said people in rural Ireland are 'very quick to tell people in urban Ireland that âweâre the real workers, weâre the ones paying all the bills, weâre the ones feeding the countryâ' Photo: Mark Marlow/PA
Household income for those living in cities is significantly higher than that of those living in the most rural areas of Ireland, new figures have shown.
Coming just a few days on from Leo Varadkarâs controversial comments on the rural-urban divide, the Central Statistics Office (CSO) has published a detailed breakdown of factors such as income, housing, health and education, broken down by how rural or urban a place is.
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It said that commuter towns with populations between 1,500 and 50,000, where more than one in five work in a city, had the highest household disposable income in the country at âŹ76,246, while cities had the second-highest household income at âŹ66,131.
It said that rural areas with âhigh urban influenceâ had the next highest income at âŹ62,446, while highly rural areas had the lowest at âŹ40,839.
In terms of property prices, the median price of a home in the State in 2024 was âŹ357,499. This rose to âŹ435,000 for homes in cities, but fell to âŹ210,000 in highly rural or remote areas.
On physical wellbeing, CSO statistician Dylan Morrissey said: âMore than half (53.2%) of people described their health as very good in 2022.
âPeople living in rural areas with high urban influence were more likely to say their health was very good, at 58.4%, while those in urban towns had the lowest proportion at 48.5%.âÂ
Also, while cities had the highest proportion of people who had at least a third-level degree at 40%, the lowest was in highly rural and remote areas at 24.3%.
The statistical breakdown of rural and urban life comes after comments from former taoiseach Leo Varadkar last week on the divide, which provoked significant debate.
On Matt Cooperâs podcast, Mr Varadkar said people in rural Ireland are âvery quick to tell people in urban Ireland that âweâre the real workers, weâre the ones paying all the bills, weâre the ones feeding the countryââ.
âI think we maybe need to be a little bit more blunt in urban Ireland and say actually, thatâs not the case,â Mr Varadkar said. âWeâre the ones paying all the bills, and youâre the ones in receipt of a lot of subsidies and a lot of tax benefits that other people donât get.âÂ
On Tuesday, Irish Farmers Association (IFA) president Francie Gorman rejected Mr Varadkarâs comments.
Speaking on Newstalkâs Claire Byrne show, Mr Gorman said âthe idea that you can have a rural-based economy in Ireland and not have agriculture at the backbone of it, just doesn't stand upâ.
âI mean, I think last year we exported âŹ19bn worth of food products,â he said. âI think we imported about three.
âWe saw in 2008 when the financial crash hit, the importance of having an indigenous industry, farming and tourism are the two industries that we have, and they need to be supported. And we've given really good value as farmers for the supports we've gotten, and we continue to do it.â