东精影业ERO | University of Hawai驶i System News /news News from the 东精影业 Tue, 14 Apr 2026 23:02:48 +0000 en-US hourly 1 /news/wp-content/uploads/2019/04/cropped-UHNews512-1-32x32.jpg 东精影业ERO | University of Hawai驶i System News /news 32 32 28449828 Natural gas offers modest gains, big risks for Hawaiʻi energy costs: UHERO report /news/2026/04/14/liquefied-natural-gas/ Tue, 14 Apr 2026 22:58:23 +0000 /news/?p=232159 While LNG could offer short-term benefits under certain conditions, its long-term value is uncertain compared to continued investment in renewable energy and recent improvements to oil supply contracts.

The post Natural gas offers modest gains, big risks for Hawai驶i energy costs: 东精影业ERO report first appeared on University of Hawai驶i System News.]]>
Reading time: 2 minutes

shot of a power plant

Switching Hawaiʻi鈥檚 power plants from oil to liquefied natural gas (LNG) may not deliver the dramatic drop in electricity prices that some proposals promise, according to a new analysis by the (东精影业ERO), released April 14.

Hawaiʻi has the highest electricity rates in the nation, largely because it relies on imported oil. But a 2024 fuel contract renegotiation by Hawaiian Electric has already begun easing some of that burden by reducing how strongly global oil price spikes translate into local costs, saving tens of millions of dollars each month compared to the previous agreement.

The report finds that while natural gas is often far cheaper than oil on the continental U.S., Hawaiʻi faces higher costs because the fuel must be cooled, shipped across the ocean and converted back into gas. Those steps significantly narrow the price gap and expose the state to volatile global LNG markets, where prices can surge during supply disruptions.

At current prices, LNG still holds a modest cost advantage over oil. However, much of the projected savings comes not from the fuel itself but from newer, more efficient power plants that use less energy to generate electricity. Similar efficiency gains could be achieved without switching fuels.

Long-term investment concerns

The analysis also raises concerns about long-term investments in LNG infrastructure. Under scenarios where Hawaiʻi continues expanding renewable energy, such as solar paired with battery storage, LNG facilities could be underused while ratepayers remain responsible for their costs. Solar and battery systems are already competitive with fossil fuels and avoid the risks tied to global fuel markets.

The findings suggest that while LNG could offer short-term benefits under certain conditions, its long-term value is uncertain compared to continued investment in renewable energy and recent improvements to oil supply contracts.

“The upside is modest and front-loaded; the downside arrives when things go wrong—and in energy markets, they eventually do,” wrote 东精影业ERO Research Fellow and 东精影业 Mānoa Economics Professor Michael J. Roberts.

Visit 东精影业ERO鈥檚 website for the and .

东精影业ERO is housed in 东精影业 Mānoa鈥檚 .

The post Natural gas offers modest gains, big risks for Hawai驶i energy costs: 东精影业ERO report first appeared on University of Hawai驶i System News.]]>
232159
One condo, hundreds of homes: UHERO study reveals housing ripple effect /news/2026/03/23/housing-filtering-uhero/ Mon, 23 Mar 2026 18:23:58 +0000 /news/?p=231126 Housing filtering is a process in which new construction sets off a chain of moves that frees up existing homes across the market.

The post One condo, hundreds of homes: 东精影业ERO study reveals housing ripple effect first appeared on University of Hawai驶i System News.]]>
Reading time: 2 minutes

condo skyline in Honolulu

A single new condominium tower in Honolulu may have opened up hundreds of additional housing opportunities across Oʻahu, according to new research from the (东精影业ERO).

The study examines a concept known as housing filtering, a process in which new construction sets off a chain of moves that frees up existing homes across the market. When a household moves into a newly built unit, it leaves behind a previous home, creating an opportunity for another household, and so on.

500+ housing vacancies created

东精影业ERO Associate Professor Justin Tyndall tracked this effect using The Central, a 512-unit mixed-income condo completed in 2021 near Ala Moana. He estimated the project generated more than 500 housing vacancies islandwide within three years, expanding availability far beyond the building itself.

“For policymakers and planners, the results highlight the importance of considering these broader market dynamics when evaluating housing policy,” Tyndall wrote. “Expanding housing supply in high-demand areas can improve affordability not only through income-restricted units, but also through the filtering process that returns older housing stock to the market.”

Greater affordability across the market

He added, “Policies that block market-rate housing construction, because new units are expensive, can be largely counterproductive. The production of all types of housing pushes up the overall supply of homes and can contribute to greater affordability across all segments of the market.”

The homes freed up through these chains were often more affordable and larger than the new units. On average, they were about 40% less expensive per square foot and more likely to include single-family homes with three or more bedrooms.

The study also found that market-rate units tended to produce more total vacancies, while income-restricted units more often opened up lower-cost housing options. Most of the movement remained local, with the majority of households relocating within Hawaiʻi.

.

东精影业ERO is housed in 东精影业 Mānoa鈥檚 .

The post One condo, hundreds of homes: 东精影业ERO study reveals housing ripple effect first appeared on University of Hawai驶i System News.]]>
231126
Low pay, not just high prices, behind Hawaiʻi鈥檚 persistent population loss /news/2026/03/19/high-prices-low-incomes/ Thu, 19 Mar 2026 21:16:53 +0000 /news/?p=230949 When adjusting for cost of living, Hawaiʻi's income levels align more closely with struggling continental U.S. regions than with high-cost, high-wage cities.

The post Low pay, not just high prices, behind Hawai驶i鈥檚 persistent population loss first appeared on University of Hawai驶i System News.]]>
Reading time: 2 minutes

condo skyline in Honolulu

For 23 of the past 25 years, more residents have left Hawaiʻi than arrived from the continental U.S., according to an . The research finds the answer is not because of high prices or low incomes, but a combination of both that puts the state in a rare and troubling category.

Hawaiʻi stands out nationally for having both high living costs and relatively modest incomes, a mix that researchers say drives persistent outmigration. While expensive continental U.S. cities often retain residents with higher wages, Hawaiʻi more closely resembles economically “left-behind” regions where limited opportunity pushes people to leave.

An analysis of migration patterns across states and 384 U.S. metro areas shows that higher prices tend to push residents out, while higher incomes attract them. In Hawaiʻi, both forces are working in the same direction, but while Hawaiʻi has always been expensive, the widening income gap with the rest of the nation is a growing and more troubling driver.

‘Priced out and left behind’

“This combination places Hawaiʻi in one of the rarest and most concerning categories in the national data: simultaneously priced out and left behind,” wrote 东精影业ERO authors Steven Bond-Smith and Erich Schwartz. “Residents are not leaving for a single reason. They are responding to a structure of economic pressures that makes staying difficult and makes opportunity elsewhere increasingly attractive.”

In urban Honolulu, high costs account for a significant share of outmigration. Incomes, which have recently fallen below the national average, add growing pressure. On Maui, price and income effects are more evenly matched, with both contributing to residents leaving. In both cases, lagging incomes predict growing shares of outmigration, while the high cost of living predicts relatively constant shares. While Hawaiʻi Island and Hawaiʻi were excluded from the city dataset, researchers believe similar forces are likely happening there too.

Researchers identified additional local factors in Honolulu—including geographic isolation, limited housing supply, congestion and a narrow industry base—that intensify migration pressures beyond what prices and incomes alone would predict.

When adjusting for cost of living, Hawaiʻi鈥檚 income levels align more closely with struggling continental U.S. regions than with high-cost, high-wage cities such as San Francisco or Seattle.

This post focuses on a key theme from 东精影业ERO鈥檚 comprehensive report, “Beyond the Price of Paradise: Is Hawaiʻi being left behind?” released on February 1. In that report, researchers say lowering the cost of living alone won鈥檛 be enough, and that Hawaiʻi must boost long-term income and productivity growth to remain economically sustainable. They recommend policies that diversify the economy, support innovation and remove barriers to growth, alongside continued efforts to improve affordability.

东精影业ERO is housed in 东精影业 Mānoa .

The post Low pay, not just high prices, behind Hawai驶i鈥檚 persistent population loss first appeared on University of Hawai驶i System News.]]>
230949
Mental health crisis after 2023 Maui wildfires extends beyond burn zones /news/2026/03/11/mauiwes-mental-health-crisis/ Wed, 11 Mar 2026 15:00:34 +0000 /news/?p=230576 More than half of the wildfire鈥檚 impact on depression and anxiety could be traced to housing instability and lost income.

The post Mental health crisis after 2023 Maui wildfires extends beyond burn zones first appeared on University of Hawai驶i System News.]]>
Reading time: 2 minutes

woman at beach during sunset

The 2023 Maui wildfires were linked to significantly higher levels of depression and anxiety among residents, with impacts extending beyond the burn zones and closely tied to housing and income disruption. That鈥檚 according to a new University of Hawaiʻi at M膩noa study published March 11 in .

The study examined 2,453 adults, including 1,535 wildfire-exposed residents on Maui and 918 unexposed residents from other Hawaiʻi counties. The data was gathered between January 2024 and February 2025 through the (MauiWES) and the 鈥檚 (东精影业ERO) Rapid Health Survey.

Key findings

people conducting tests on patients
MauiWES recruitment event
  • Residents inside burn zones had a 53% higher risk of depression and 67% higher risk of anxiety compared to unexposed residents.
  • Maui residents living outside burn zones also experienced significantly elevated mental health risks, including more than double the risk of suicidal thoughts.
  • More than half of the wildfire鈥檚 impact on depression and anxiety could be traced to housing instability and lost income.
  • Being employed was strongly protective against depression, anxiety and suicidal ideation.

“These findings show that the wildfire鈥檚 psychological toll is not confined to the areas that burned,” said lead author and 东精影业ERO Professor Ruben Juarez. “The social and economic disruption鈥攅specially housing instability and income disruption鈥攊s driving much of the distress we see across the community.”

See more 东精影业 News stories on MauiWES

Co-author and Professor Alika K. Maunakea added, “Climate disasters affect biological, social and economic systems at the same time. If we only rebuild structures and do not stabilize housing, employment and mental health services, we leave communities vulnerable long after the smoke clears.”

Co-author Christopher Knightsbridge, a mental health therapist from MauiWES based in Lahaina said, “The harm did not stop at the burn zone. Housing disruption and income loss have extended the crisis into daily life, which is why recovery must include stronger housing, economic, and mental health supports.”

The August 2023 fires, which killed more than 100 people and destroyed more than 2,200 structures, displaced an estimated 10,000 residents. The study found that psychological distress persisted six to 18 months after the disaster.

东精影业ERO is housed in the .

The post Mental health crisis after 2023 Maui wildfires extends beyond burn zones first appeared on University of Hawai驶i System News.]]>
230576
Bezos gift backs UH research to restore Maui grasslands and reduce wildfire risk /news/2026/03/10/bezos-gift-restore-grasslands-reduce-wildfire-risk/ Wed, 11 Mar 2026 00:55:07 +0000 /news/?p=230587 Large areas of former plantation lands are vulnerable to fires.

The post Bezos gift backs 东精影业 research to restore Maui grasslands and reduce wildfire risk first appeared on University of Hawai驶i System News.]]>
Reading time: 2 minutes

Fire and firefighters

A $2-million gift from Jeff Bezos and Lauren S谩nchez Bezos is supporting University of Hawaiʻi-led research aimed at restoring fire-prone grasslands on Maui and reducing the risk of future wildfires, building on and long-term recovery following the devastating 2023 fires.

Grass
Guinea grass

Much of Maui鈥檚 former sugar plantation lands are now unmanaged and dominated by invasive species, such as guinea grass, that create more fire-prone vegetation and intensify wildfire risk. Several 东精影业 units are collaborating to address that vulnerability through land stewardship research designed to inform policy and guide on-the-ground management decisions.

The effort brings together researchers from the (东精影业ERO) housed in 东精影业 惭腻苍辞补鈥檚 , the , and the Ecosystems and Land Care Program in the Department of (NREM) in the College of Tropical Agriculture and Human Resilience. The work will be conducted with watershed partners, ranchers and ʻ膩ina (land)-based organizations across Hawaiʻi.

“Insufficient investment in land care across former plantation lands has left large areas of Maui vulnerable to wildfire,” said Kimberly Burnett, a specialist with 东精影业ERO. “This work builds on evidence that actively managed lands, including forests, well-managed rangelands and agriculture, can significantly reduce fuel loads and support outcomes like erosion reduction, food production, biodiversity and community resilience.”

Data-driven strategies for wildfire prevention

Guinea grass
Guinea grass

In the early stages of the project, researchers will work closely with partners to co-develop research questions and products that are directly useful for land managers and decision-makers. Anticipated outcomes include statewide wildfire risk and probability maps to help guide fire reduction strategies across a range of land uses, as well as analyses of different wildfire mitigation scenarios over space and time.

Those scenarios may include forest restoration, green breaks, agroforestry, grazing and mowing, with researchers assessing the benefits and costs of each approach.

“We want to look at options beyond just mowing brush given how well these different actions align with other things people value and contribute to public safety,” said Clay Trauernicht, a specialist with NREM.

The project will also examine policy and market-based tools that could help finance and support land-use transitions that advance multiple ecosystem services, including wildfire risk reduction, across Hawaiʻi.

The gift builds on existing support from the Bezos Maui Fund to restore the island鈥檚 watersheds and reduce wildfire risk, and reflects a broader strategy that links environmental recovery with community resilience. That land-based work is complemented by a separate $1.5-million investment to support Lahainaluna High School graduates enrolled at 东精影业 who continue to face economic hardship following the fires.

“We are profoundly grateful to our donors for their continued commitment to Maui,” said 东精影业 Foundation CEO and Vice President of Advancement Tim Dolan. “Their support is making a lasting difference for the people and places that define this community.”

The post Bezos gift backs 东精影业 research to restore Maui grasslands and reduce wildfire risk first appeared on University of Hawai驶i System News.]]>
230587
Career changers: UH trainings can boost earnings by up to $5,500 per quarter /news/2026/03/10/uh-trainings-can-boost-earnings/ Tue, 10 Mar 2026 21:00:39 +0000 /news/?p=230535 东精影业 healthcare training may boost annual earnings by $22,000.

The post Career changers: 东精影业 trainings can boost earnings by up to $5,500 per quarter first appeared on University of Hawai驶i System News.]]>
Reading time: 2 minutes

Students training nursing techniques

A new report from the (东精影业ERO) emphasizes the crucial role of the 东精影业 Community Colleges鈥 Good Jobs Hawaiʻi (GJH) program in successfully placing residents into high-demand, higher-paying careers. The preliminary analysis by Rachel Inafuku provides more evidence that these targeted training programs are helping families combat Hawaiʻi’s persistent, high cost of living.

“Consistent with the , average real quarterly wages for [Good Jobs Hawaiʻi] completers were more than $2,000 higher two quarters after program completion than two quarters prior,” the report said. This increase demonstrates how these short-term programs are creating essential earning power.

Higher healthcare earnings

nurse

The most dramatic gains were found among those who transitioned into a new field after training. In healthcare, the largest GJH pathway, participants who switched from non-healthcare industries—such as retail or food services—saw their average quarterly earnings rise by more than $5,500 two quarters after completion. This amounts to an annualized earnings increase of $22,000 for workers entering a sector with sustained high demand due to Hawaiʻi’s aging population.

Significant gains for skilled trades

person operating forklift

Similarly, skilled trades completers realized significant wage gains, earning roughly $2,600 more per quarter post-program. Employment patterns for this group also shifted away from lower-wage sectors and toward construction, manufacturing and public administration, aligning with the state’s thriving construction industry and its well-above-average wages.

Smaller increases for tech

Outcomes varied by sector. Technology students—many of whom were mid-career workers with pre-program earnings higher than the average GJH student—experienced smaller wage increases and more modest changes in industry placement.

Read more 东精影业 News Good Jobs Hawaiʻi stories

Overall, these findings highlight how post-training earnings trajectories reflect both the specific skills acquired and the broader structure of Hawaiʻi鈥檚 labor market.

Inafuku said, “As Hawaiʻi continues to face a high demand for workers in critical sectors alongside persistent cost-of-living pressures, workforce programs that align training with industry needs can address both challenges—placing workers in more stable, higher-paying jobs while helping employers meet demand.”

东精影业ERO is housed in 东精影业 惭腻苍辞补鈥檚 .

The post Career changers: 东精影业 trainings can boost earnings by up to $5,500 per quarter first appeared on University of Hawai驶i System News.]]>
230535
东精影业ERO: Hawaiʻi鈥檚 鈥榣ost decade鈥 has become a 鈥榣ost generation鈥 /news/2026/03/06/uhero-report-lost-generation/ Sat, 07 Mar 2026 00:09:11 +0000 /news/?p=230466 Economic stagnation, which began in the early 1990s, never truly ended in Hawaiʻi.

The post 东精影业ERO: Hawai驶i鈥檚 鈥榣ost decade鈥 has become a 鈥榣ost generation鈥 first appeared on University of Hawai驶i System News.]]>
Reading time: 2 minutes

Honolulu aerial

The gap between what Hawaiʻi residents can afford compared to elsewhere in the U.S. widens every year, not because of high prices, but because of lagging productivity and wage growth, according to a new analysis released March 5, by the University of Hawaiʻi Economic Research Organization (东精影业ERO).

The state鈥檚 economic stagnation, which began in the early 1990s, has never truly ended for residents, according to the authors. Adjusting for Hawaiʻi鈥檚 substantially higher cost of living, while national metrics suggested a recovery in the 2000s, the state鈥檚 real per capita GDP has been on a permanently lower, underperforming trajectory.

by Steven Bond-Smith and Erich Schwartz, details how Hawaiʻi鈥檚 economic boom in the 1980s made it highly vulnerable to the collapse of Japan鈥檚 asset bubble. Despite an initial delay in the shock, the downturn exposed local weaknesses such as overreliance on tourism and slow economic diversification.

Slower growth, widening gap

Standard measures, which adjust for national inflation rates, indicate Hawaiʻi mostly kept pace with the U.S. economy and has only just fallen below the U.S. average in recent years. However, by accounting for local prices, the 东精影业ERO analysis tells a different story. When cost-of-living is factored in, the lost decade of the 1990s wasn鈥檛 quite as bad as it first appears, as prices grew more slowly in Hawaiʻi than in the U.S. overall, but the recovery is also muted as prices returned to their long-run relative level.

This results in an average real per capita growth rate since 2005 of a meager 0.7% per year, essentially matching the slow growth rate of the lost decade and its recovery from 1990 to 2005. As such, the lost decade never really ended in Hawaiʻi. This persistently slower growth rate has resulted in a gap with the mainland U.S. that has steadily widened. The primary driver of the widening gap appears to be that the state鈥檚 dominant tourism industry plateaued, and other sectors have not emerged to offset this slowdown.

Hawaiʻi鈥檚 ‘lost decade’ has become a lost generation,” the report states.

Economic underperformance, social consequences

This persistent underperformance reframes many of the state鈥檚 most pressing issues, including outmigration, housing stress and the difficulty for middle-class families to sustain a standard of living. The findings underscore a need for policies that address the long-term structural weaknesses in the state鈥檚 economy rather than focusing solely on the cost of living, which would only provide temporary relief from the widening gap between Hawaiʻi and the U.S. overall.

The analysis builds on a February 1, 2026 东精影业ERO report, “Beyond the Price of Paradise: Is Hawaiʻi Being Left Behind?” also authored by Bond-Smith and Schwartz.

东精影业ERO is housed in .

The post 东精影业ERO: Hawai驶i鈥檚 鈥榣ost decade鈥 has become a 鈥榣ost generation鈥 first appeared on University of Hawai驶i System News.]]>
230466
Nearly $800K in new funding from HCF, Kaiser supports UH鈥檚 Maui wildfire study /news/2026/03/01/mauiwes-hcf-kaiser-support/ Sun, 01 Mar 2026 18:00:22 +0000 /news/?p=230188 The funding will help sustain health screenings, follow-up visits and community outreach as researchers continue monitoring the physical and mental health effects of wildfire exposure.

The post Nearly $800K in new funding from HCF, Kaiser supports 东精影业鈥檚 Maui wildfire study first appeared on University of Hawai驶i System News.]]>
Reading time: 3 minutes

person doing a health test on a patient

Two new grants totaling nearly $800,000 will support the University of Hawaiʻi鈥檚 ongoing (MauiWES), a long-term effort tracking the health impacts of the 2023 Lahaina fires on Maui residents.

The Hawaiʻi Community Foundation has awarded $450,000 through its Maui Strong Fund, and Kaiser Permanente has committed $337,500 to the study. The funding will help sustain health screenings, follow-up visits and community outreach as researchers continue monitoring the physical and mental health effects of wildfire exposure.

“This support allows us to keep showing up for the Maui community over the long term,” said study co-lead Ruben Juarez, professor at the (东精影业ERO). “The willingness of residents to participate and return for follow-up visits reflects a level of trust that is essential for understanding the full health impacts of the fires鈥攁nd for responding in ways that truly help families over time.”

people sitting in a room for health testing
A Maui Wildfire Exposure Study event in 2024

The Hawaiʻi Community Foundation funding was awarded through the Maui Recovery Funders Collaborative, which was established in response to the Maui wildfires. The collaborative coordinates a variety of funders to streamline funding opportunities for community service providers and organizations.

“The Hawaiʻi Community Foundation, through its Maui Strong Fund, is a proud participant of the Maui Recovery Funders Collaborative, which has awarded over $9 million in funds to support organizations that are assisting those impacted by the fires,” said HCF CEO and President Terry George. “Efforts like the MauiWES not only help to provide continued health and mental health support to survivors but also help us to be better prepared and ultimately more resilient in the face of future disasters.”

“Kaiser Permanente鈥檚 commitment to funding the Maui Wildfire Exposure Study reflects the belief that strong, community鈥慺ocused research should guide long鈥憈erm recovery and future preparedness,” said David Tumilowicz, senior director of marketing and community health, Kaiser Permanente. “As climate鈥慸riven wildfires become more frequent and destructive, we need clear, reliable health and environmental data to understand exposure risks, improve clinical care, and strengthen public health systems throughout the United States. MauiWES is providing essential insights that support Maui鈥檚 healing, while helping communities everywhere become more resilient in the face of future disasters.”

The grants arrive at an important moment for the project. In December 2025, MauiWES surpassed its 3,000th completed appointment. More than 2,000 participants have taken part since the study began, and more than 1,000 have already returned for follow-up visits, reflecting sustained engagement and growing trust within the community.

Launched after the deadly wildfires that destroyed large parts of Lahaina, MauiWES is a collaboration among 东精影业ERO, (JABSOM) and 东精影业 Maui College. The study provides free health screenings while generating data to better understand the long-term health consequences of wildfire smoke, environmental exposure and disaster-related stress.

Health challenges continue for residents

The study鈥檚 latest findings, published in August 2025 in JAMA Network Open, show that health challenges persist nearly two years after the fires. Many participants reported ongoing symptoms such as fatigue and breathing problems, alongside measurable differences in lung function indicators among those living closest to the burn zone. Mental health impacts also remain widespread, with a substantial share of participants screening positive for depressive symptoms and anxiety.

At the same time, researchers found that strong social support was linked to better mental well-being and fewer days of poor health, even among those with high wildfire exposure. While social connections supported mental health, they did not offset physical effects, highlighting the need for continued medical monitoring and care.

“These new grants come at a critical time,” said co-lead Alika Maunakea, professor in the Department of Anatomy, Biochemistry and Physiology at JABSOM. “They ensure we can continue monitoring both physical and mental health effects more than two years after the fires, while strengthening the community-based approach that our findings show is critical to recovery.”

Juarez and Maunakea recently returned from the first , held in commemoration of the first anniversary of the fires, where they presented findings from MauiWES to help inform the response to the Los Angeles fires. Teams from University of Southern California, University of California, Los Angeles, Stanford University and Harvard University are exploring similar cohort-based approaches informed by lessons from MauiWES for the Altadena, Eaton and Palisades fires.

See more 东精影业 News stories on MauiWES.

The post Nearly $800K in new funding from HCF, Kaiser supports 东精影业鈥檚 Maui wildfire study first appeared on University of Hawai驶i System News.]]>
230188
东精影业ERO: Hawaiʻi moves beyond recession, growth to remain modest /news/2026/02/27/uhero-first-quarter-forecast-2026/ Fri, 27 Feb 2026 13:50:19 +0000 /news/?p=230095 Overall, 东精影业ERO expects Hawaiʻi鈥檚 economy to expand at a modest rate over the next several years.

The post 东精影业ERO: Hawai驶i moves beyond recession, growth to remain modest first appeared on University of Hawai驶i System News.]]>
Reading time: 2 minutes
people on a beach
Tourism has stabilized but is not yet expanding, according to 东精影业ERO‘s first quarter forecast for 2026. (Photo credit: Sung Shin/Unsplash)

Hawaiʻi鈥檚 economy is moving beyond last year鈥檚 mild recession, but the recovery will be gradual, according to the 鈥檚 (东精影业ERO) first quarter forecast for 2026 released on February 27. After job losses tied to a tourism downturn and federal job cuts, payrolls have begun to edge upward.

A resilient U.S. economy and continued strength in construction are providing support, even as international visitor markets languish. Tepid job and income growth will become the new normal, because of anemic population trends and structural underperformance (relatively low long-run growth trend).

Major takeaways of the February 27 report:

  • The U.S. economy has held up better than expected, with solid consumer spending, investments in artificial intelligence and improving productivity. Economic gains slowed in the fourth quarter of 2025, partly because of the federal government shutdown. 东精影业ERO expects growth to remain near 2% this year before slowing somewhat in 2027. It is too soon to know the effects of the recent Supreme Court decision invalidating the administration鈥檚 broad tariffs. Globally, conditions have improved modestly, but continued trade tensions and policy uncertainty present ongoing risks.
  • Tourism has stabilized but is not yet expanding. In 2025, the average daily visitor census dropped 1.3%. The Japanese recovery has resumed at a moderate pace, but arrivals from other international markets have fallen sharply, reflecting adverse reaction to U.S. federal policy. Domestic visitors have helped offset these losses, and spending rose last year even as visitor numbers declined. Arrivals will stabilize this year, but a more substantial recovery in visitor headcounts is not expected until 2027.
  • The local labor market has improved modestly after contracting in the first half of 2025. 东精影业ERO now expects a small net increase in payroll jobs this year. Construction, health care and the accommodations and food service sectors will continue to add jobs, while federal civilian employment losses will pull down growth numbers. The unemployment rate will remain near its current low 2.2% level.
  • Inflation in Honolulu is expected to peak just above 3% in the second half of this year, although persistent U.S. inflation and the recent Supreme Court ruling on tariffs introduce considerable uncertainty. Local inflation will then ease to a 2.5% trend. Mortgage rates will remain near 6%, weighing on housing affordability even as construction activity overall remains elevated.

Overall, 东精影业ERO expects Hawaiʻi鈥檚 economy to expand at a modest rate over the next several years.

“Real income will grow by about 1% annually,” 东精影业ERO wrote. “Real GDP will expand by 1.6% this year before converging to a similarly slow long-run growth path. Forecast risks remain significant, including trade policy uncertainty, potential additional federal workforce reductions and ongoing weakness in international tourism. While the adoption of artificial intelligence holds promise, Hawaiʻi鈥檚 road ahead still looks to be one with slower growth than we have seen in the past.”

.

东精影业ERO is housed in 东精影业 Mānoa鈥檚 .

See the latest episode of 东精影业ERO Focus.

The post 东精影业ERO: Hawai驶i moves beyond recession, growth to remain modest first appeared on University of Hawai驶i System News.]]>
230095
Hawaiʻi鈥檚 economy resembles ‘left-behind’ regions in UHERO analysis /news/2026/02/19/economy-left-behind-region/ Thu, 19 Feb 2026 22:56:28 +0000 /news/?p=229706 “Left-behind” regions are areas where slow growth and limited opportunity leave incomes and productivity lagging behind the national average.

The post Hawai驶i鈥檚 economy resembles 鈥榣eft-behind鈥 regions in 东精影业ERO analysis first appeared on University of Hawai驶i System News.]]>
Reading time: 2 minutes

land and blue sky

Hawaiʻi may increasingly resemble economically distressed “left-behind” regions—not because of rising prices, but because incomes and productivity have lagged for decades, according to a new analysis released February 19, by the (东精影业ERO). “Left-behind” regions are areas where slow growth and limited opportunity leave incomes and productivity lagging behind the national average, often affecting residents鈥 economic mobility and overall opportunity.

The analysis builds on a February 1 东精影业ERO report, “Beyond the Price of Paradise: Is Hawaiʻi Being Left Behind?” Also authored by Steven Bond-Smith and Erich Schwartz, it highlights new comparisons showing how the state ranks when income is adjusted for cost of living.

Using a price-adjusted measure of GDP per capita, the researchers found that once purchasing power is considered, Hawaiʻi鈥檚 real income per person has barely grown since the early 1990s and has steadily diverged from the national average. The February 19 analysis also compares Hawaiʻi to federal benchmarks used to define economic distress. When incomes are adjusted for local prices and compared across states, Hawaiʻi鈥檚 relative position drops sharply—placing it closer to slower-growth states than to high-income, high-cost metro areas such as Seattle or Boston.

Tourism, the state鈥檚 dominant industry, boomed in the decades after statehood but has largely plateaued since the late 1980s. Without sustained expansion in its economic backbone, broader growth has remained weak. The authors argue that Hawaiʻi鈥檚 high cost of living may mask deeper structural problems.

“What distinguishes Hawaiʻi is not only that it is expensive,” the researchers wrote. “It is that incomes and productivity have not kept up, and this has persisted for decades.”

The findings reinforce conclusions from the February 1 report that the state鈥檚 challenges stem less from rising prices than from long-term stagnation in productivity and per capita growth. The researchers warn that without diversification beyond tourism and stronger productivity gains, Hawaiʻi risks continued economic stagnation and outmigration.

.

东精影业ERO is housed in .

The post Hawai驶i鈥檚 economy resembles 鈥榣eft-behind鈥 regions in 东精影业ERO analysis first appeared on University of Hawai驶i System News.]]>
229706