HONOLULU — Household and family incomes in Hawaii increased last year to remain among the highest in the country, according to a U.S. Census Bureau survey.
The annual American Community Survey released last week shows housing costs and poverty rates also increased in the state while the percentage of the population without health insurance remained low, the Honolulu Star-Advertiser reported Wednesday.
The median household income for Hawaii increased by 2.4 percent to $77,765 last year, the fourth highest among states, according to the survey. Median family income increased by 3 percent to $91,460, the sixth highest in the U.S.
Nearly 40 percent of Hawaii families had two earners, and nearly 17 percent had three or more, according to the survey. Oahu had the most families with three or more earners at nearly 18 percent.
The median monthly housing cost for renters was nearly $1,600 last year, increasing from about $1,500 the prior year. The median monthly housing cost for owners with mortgages was $2,337, which the report noted was not statistically different from 2016 after adjusting for inflation.
More than 7 percent of Hawaii families were in poverty last year, an increase from 6 percent in 2016. About 9.5 percent of Hawaii residents were in poverty, the third lowest in the country last year.
About 3.8 percent of Hawaii’s population did not have health insurance coverage last year, ranking the state the second lowest. The percentage was not statistically different form the prior year, according to the survey.
The U.S. Census Bureau surveyed about 1.7 percent of the state’s population to formulate the figures. Data for the American Community Survey is collected for areas with 65,000 people or more.
2,337 x 3 is around a 100k a year. So if you want to go by the old rule of 1/3 of your income at most for a house, the median house in Hawaii requires a job that pays 100k or two jobs that pay 50k. No wonder we lose a lot of our young people to the mainland, they can’t afford to start families here. We need to come up with a way to provide local people access to affordable housing or we will always be a community of retirees, tourists, and second homes for the wealthy.
That won’t happen without cutting building regulation and getting rid of GET. Those two things make building “affordable” housing here nothing but a dream. Hawaii has adopted the West coast model in which homes cost 5 times that of most any flyover state.
Instead of thinking of more regulations and taxes why not figure a way to bring more industry to our islands? Oh wait men keep your mouth shut! Way to go government!