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HOUSING STOCK <br />Another major factor in estimating housing need is the housing stock itself. If the rate of <br />housing unit production keeps pace with population increase, then housing availability will be <br />sufficient to handle the need generated by new households. According to U.S. Census <br />estimates, Hawaii's housing stock grew from about 322,845 units in 2003 to 332,196 units in <br />2006. That amounts to an average annual growth rate of about 1.6 percent per year, about a <br />half a percent higher than the population growth rate during the same period. <br />Table 2. Total Housing Units, 1990 -2006 <br />Sources: 1990 Census, 2000 Census, American Community Survey, 2003, 2004, 2005; 2006 is an SMS estimate. <br />a. Average annual increase for the period noted. <br />During the previous decade, the housing stock grew by the same rate (1.6 %), or about double <br />the population growth rate. It slowed to 1.2 percent per year between 2000 and 2003, closer to <br />the population growth rate during the same period. The situation in the last three years saw <br />both rates increase, with stock growth staying ahead of population growth 1.6 percent to 1.1 <br />percent. <br />Another important piece of the story is conditions at the beginning of the period under study. <br />The Housing Policy Study 1992 described a housing market in Hawaii with very high pent -up <br />demand. The very rapid population growth in the eighties, combined with production patterns <br />that favored high -end units followed by rapidly declining economic conditions, caused major <br />decreases in supply. Crowding' and doubling up were at record high levels, survey indictors of <br />pent -up demand were all high, and affordable units were in low supply. The same factors <br />worked toward lower population growth during the nineties. Birth rates fell, and people left the <br />State to find better economic conditions and lower priced housing. Housing production, while <br />slow, favored affordable units. And as the economy improved between 1997 and 2000, housing <br />production rose to meet new demand, now reinforced by out -of -state buyers. <br />Crowding was measured according to the US Census definition, "more than 1.01 persons per room ". Doubling up <br />was measured as the number of households with more than one family per household. <br />Hawaii Housing Policy Study, 2006 Page 9 <br />© SMS, Inc. February, 2007 <br />State of <br />Hawaii <br />County <br />Of Honolulu <br />County <br />of Hawaii <br />County <br />of Maui <br />County <br />of Kauai <br />1990 <br />389,810 <br />281,683 <br />48,253 <br />42,261 <br />17,613 <br />1992 <br />411,494 <br />290,571 <br />49,394 <br />51,578 <br />19,951 <br />1997 <br />449,385 <br />311,398 <br />59,098 <br />54,321 <br />24,568 <br />1999 <br />456,091 <br />314,448 <br />61,108 <br />55,475 <br />25,060 <br />2000 <br />460,542 <br />315,988 <br />62,674 <br />56,549 <br />25,331 <br />2003 <br />477,333 <br />322,845 <br />67,878 <br />59,788 <br />26,822 <br />2004 <br />484,936 <br />325,888 <br />70,927 <br />60,888 <br />27,233 <br />2005 <br />491,671 <br />329,300 <br />71,984 <br />62,178 <br />28,209 <br />2006 <br />501,956 <br />332,196 <br />77,577 <br />63,364 <br />28,819 <br />Percent change 1990 -2000a <br />1.6% <br />1.1% <br />2.5% <br />2.8% <br />3.5% <br />Percent change 2000 -2003a <br />1.2% <br />0.7% <br />2.6% <br />1.8% <br />1.8% <br />Percent change 2003 -2006a <br />1.6% <br />0.9% <br />4.3% <br />1.9% <br />2.3% <br />Sources: 1990 Census, 2000 Census, American Community Survey, 2003, 2004, 2005; 2006 is an SMS estimate. <br />a. Average annual increase for the period noted. <br />During the previous decade, the housing stock grew by the same rate (1.6 %), or about double <br />the population growth rate. It slowed to 1.2 percent per year between 2000 and 2003, closer to <br />the population growth rate during the same period. The situation in the last three years saw <br />both rates increase, with stock growth staying ahead of population growth 1.6 percent to 1.1 <br />percent. <br />Another important piece of the story is conditions at the beginning of the period under study. <br />The Housing Policy Study 1992 described a housing market in Hawaii with very high pent -up <br />demand. The very rapid population growth in the eighties, combined with production patterns <br />that favored high -end units followed by rapidly declining economic conditions, caused major <br />decreases in supply. Crowding' and doubling up were at record high levels, survey indictors of <br />pent -up demand were all high, and affordable units were in low supply. The same factors <br />worked toward lower population growth during the nineties. Birth rates fell, and people left the <br />State to find better economic conditions and lower priced housing. Housing production, while <br />slow, favored affordable units. And as the economy improved between 1997 and 2000, housing <br />production rose to meet new demand, now reinforced by out -of -state buyers. <br />Crowding was measured according to the US Census definition, "more than 1.01 persons per room ". Doubling up <br />was measured as the number of households with more than one family per household. <br />Hawaii Housing Policy Study, 2006 Page 9 <br />© SMS, Inc. February, 2007 <br />