I find that extending the list comprehension makes this easier to read:
[ m | n <- [1..5], m <- [2*n,3*n] ]
It might be helpful to examine exactly what this does, and how it relates to other solutions. Let's define it as a function:
mult lst = [ m | n <- lst, m <- [2*n,3*n] ]
After a fashion, this desugars to
mult' lst =
concatMap (\n -> concatMap (\m -> [m]) [2*n,3*n]) lst
The expression concatMap (\m -> [m]) is wrapping m up in a list in order to immediately flatten it—it is equivalent to map id.
Compare this to @FunctorSalad's answer:
mult1 lst = concatMap (\n -> [n*2,n*3]) lst
We've optimized away concatMap (\m -> [m]).
Now @vili's answer:
mult2 lst = concat [ [(n*2),(n*3)] | n <- lst]
This desugars to:
mult2' lst = concat (concatMap (\n -> [[2*n,3*n]]) lst)
As in the first solution above, we are unnecessarily creating a list of lists that we have to concat away.
I don't think there is a solution that uses list comprehensions, but desugars to mult1. My intuition is that Haskell compilers are generally clever enough that this wouldn't matter (or, alternatively, that unnecessary concats are cheap due to lazy evaluation (whereas they're lethal in eager languages)).