The
social network for professionals said last June that it would
increase its Irish-based workforce to 2,000 from 1,200 over the
next year as it moved into a new 14,000 square meter (150,000
square feet) head office by the end of 2020.
LinkedIn agreed to add the remaining 40,000 square meters of
office space at the Wilton Park development in central Dublin,
the campus' landlord IPUT, the largest owner of offices in
Dublin, said in a statement.
The move provides the U.S. technology company with enough
capacity to grow its headcount by more than 4,000 workers, the
Irish Times reported. Microsoft separately employs 2,000 people
elsewhere in Dublin.
Ireland is the European hub for a number of major technology
firms. Facebook signed the largest ever office lease in Dublin
in 2018 with plans for a new 57,000 square meter campus while
Google bought a 37,000 square meter development earlier that
year, to add to its other offices in the city.
The expansions by some of the world's biggest companies come as
new global rules are considered on how and where big internet
firms pay tax that could test multinationals' commitment to
Ireland where they pay a low 12.5% corporate tax rate.
The Irish state agency competing to win foreign business said
this week that there was no indication that companies were
thinking differently about Ireland based on what tax reforms may
emerge.
IDA Ireland reported that employment by multinationals rose 6%
year-on-year in 2019, almost three-times the rate across
Ireland's fast-growing economy. Foreign companies now employ
almost 250,000 people or just over one in 10 Irish workers.
(Reporting by Padraic Halpin;Editing by Elaine Hardcastle)
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