Sean Barrett (economist)


Sean Declan Conrad Barrett is an Irish economist and former senator. He was a senior lecturer in the Department of Economics of Trinity College, Dublin, and a Fellow of the College. In April 2011, he was elected to the Dublin University constituency of Seanad Éireann but narrowly lost his seat in 2016. In 2018 he was elected a Pro-Chancellor of the University of Dublin.

Academic career

A graduate of University College Dublin in 1973, and of McMaster University in Hamilton, Ontario, Barrett has been a member of the University of Dublin's department of Economics since 1977.
Barrett's main area of academic expertise is transport economics, particularly the civil aviation sector, including scholarship concerning Ryanair, Aer Lingus and the economics of airports, as well as the effects of regulation and deregulation. His other work concerns health economics and the economics of public policy.
Barrett is a Fellow of Trinity College, Dublin and has served several terms on its Board. His college appointments include a term as Junior Dean and Registrar of Chambers between 1986 and 2000. He is one of the Vice-Presidents of the debating society College Historical Society, the Vice-President of Trinity's Choral Society and the President of DUBES.
He was one of the economists along with Colm McCarthy and Moore McDowell, nicknamed the Doheny & Nesbitt School of Economics, who were closely identified with the early policies of the Progressive Democrats.

Election history

Barrett has contested four Seanad Éireann elections in the three-seat University of Dublin constituency. He finished fourth at the 1997 election, behind the incumbent Senators David Norris, Mary Henry and Shane Ross. At the 2002 election, he finished fifth behind the same three incumbents and his fellow future Dublin University Senator, Ivana Bacik. Barrett did not contest the 2007 Seanad election. He came fourth again in 2016.

Seanad Éireann

Barrett was elected to Seanad Éireann by the University of Dublin constituency for one term beginning in 2011. Barrett worked primarily on economic and education related matters on a non-partisan basis. Since 2011, he worked as a member of the Joint Oireachtas Committee of Inquiry into the Banking Crisis, Joint Oireachtas Committee on Finance, Public Expenditure and Reform, Joint Oireachtas Committee on Transport and Communications, Independent University Senators technical group in Seanad Éireann, and the North/South Inter-Parliamentary Association.
In the area of Economic legislation, Barrett has pushed through the Fiscal Responsibility Bill 2011 to ensure transparency in Government budgets
and the Financial Stability and Reform Bill 2013 to create regulations on the activities of banks.
He has also tabled legislation with regard to Housing with the Mortgage Credit Bill 2012
and the National Mortgage and Housing Corporation Bill 2015 to ensure fair access to homeownership, address the accommodation shortage and ensure the smooth operation of the property sector in Ireland.
In the area of Education, Barrett passed the Higher Education and Research Bill 2014 to address some of the unfinished business related to the creation of a consolidated legislative framework for higher education and research in Ireland.
and the Universities Bill 2015 to highlight new definitions of academic freedom, proportionality of government control with respect to funding, and an innovation framework for the university sector.
Barrett also tabled the Copyright and Related Rights Bill 2015

Publications