Hawaii’s Population Continues A Slide That Began In 2017, New Data Shows
The pandemic interrupted survey collection efforts but researchers say the new data can be helpful to chart Hawaii’s demographic shifts.
Hawaii鈥檚 population continues to decrease and get older on average, according to federal data released over the past two weeks.
The state鈥檚 population fell by more than 10,000 in the year ending July 1, continuing a trend since 2017, said state economist Eugene Tian, .
At the same time, Hawaii’s elderly community is growing, and slightly more are living in poverty, even as poverty fell for Hawaii residents overall, according to and published this month.
The U.S. Census Bureau cautions the new American Community Survey data is less accurate than previous data due to the pandemic.
Kendrick Leong, research and data analysis lead at the Hawaii Data Collaborative, says only about 70% of people replied to the American Community Survey in 2020 compared to more than 80% the previous year, and the respondents skewed wealthier.
That prompted data collectors to supplement the survey responses with property tax records, federal tax data and information from the U.S. Postal Service, Long said.
Justin Hong, an independent research consultant, said the result is that 2016-2020 data 鈥渋s probably more representative of a time period pre-Covid than it is the Covid period.鈥
Still, many of the findings match long-known trends. The proportion of people aged 65 and up who live in Hawaii grew by more than 40% . On Maui County, that rate was 67.3%.
Keali驶i Lopez, state director of the American Association of Retired Persons, said Hawaii has long had a fast-aging population. She urged policymakers to 鈥渞ecognize that there’s a lot more that we’re going to have to do as more people become older and become a majority of the population.鈥
That includes addressing the cost of long-term care, helping people save for retirement and overcoming community opposition to affordable housing for elderly people, said Lopez, who has been lobbying the Legislature on several bills this year.
鈥淧olicymakers and such need to stop kicking the can down the road,鈥 Lopez said. 鈥淚t’s been a long time coming and the community as a whole, the state as a whole, has to start paying attention.鈥
Kauai And Hawaii Counties Grow
The U.S. Census Bureau last year reported the state’s population grew 7% from 2010 to 2020, but Tian, the state economist, said that the state population has declined since 2017.
Tian thinks the downward trend is due to a combination of fewer births, more deaths and more people moving to the mainland where food and housing is more affordable.
Nationally, birth rates have been on the decline, and the U.S. Census Bureau found that Covid-related deaths contributed to a record number of
But not every county saw its population shrink. While Honolulu and Maui counties鈥 populations fell, Hawaii and Kauai counties鈥 grew.
That may reflect domestic migration patterns. Remote work allowed some people living on the mainland to move to Hawaii,聽and even though international migration was down, so many people moved domestically between 2020 and 2021 that
Economic Changes
The data revealed numerous economic and social shifts for Hawaii residents over the past decade. More people had health insurance between 2016 and 2020 than between 2011 and 2015. Both Medicaid and private health insurance options through the Affordable Care Act marketplace expanded over the past decade.
Hawaii homeowners’ mortgage burdens decreased, which Tian thinks may be related to the lower interest rates that allowed homeowners to refinance.
Poverty fell in every state, including Hawaii, when comparing the 2016-2020 survey data to the 2011-2015 data. But in Hawaii, poverty grew slightly for people over the age of 65, from 7.6% to 8.3%.
Hong, the independent research consultant, thinks that poverty might be higher in the community than reflected in the data because the interrupted data collection in 2020 didn’t fully capture the economic disruption wrought by Covid.
“You鈥檙e looking at a period of time that can really mask recent changes,” Hong said of the 2016-2020 data.
Incomes also rose, with nearly 49% of Hawaii families earning $100,000 or more in the 2016-2020 survey compared with 43% in the 2011-2015 survey. The median household income in Hawaii grew from $75,810 in 2011-2015 to $83,173 in 2016-2020.
Tian, the state economist, said Hawaii consistently has among the highest household incomes in the nation but added that the state also has the largest household size, with multiple generations often living under the same roof.
He thinks a better metric for comparison than median household income is per capita income 鈥 about $37,000 in the latest data 鈥 which is closer to the national average of $35,384.
Civil Beat鈥檚 health coverage is supported by , Swayne Family Fund of Hawaii Community Foundation, Cooke Foundation and
“Struggling To Get By” is part of our series on 鈥Hawaii鈥檚 Changing Economy鈥 which is supported by a grant from the as part of its CHANGE Framework project.
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About the Author
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Anita Hofschneider is a reporter for Civil Beat. You can reach her by email at anita@civilbeat.org or follow her on Twitter at .