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The Grassroot Institute of Hawaii made heavy inroads into Hawaii’s housing policy debate this week with the release of its new report, “The ‘outsider’ theory of Hawaii’s housing crisis,” by research associate Jensen Ahokovi.
On Monday, the state’s largest daily newspaper, the Honolulu Star-Advertiser, featured the report in the lead article of its local news section. Later that same day, the story was covered by KITV4.
Star-Advertiser reporter Allison Schaefers wrote that the new policy brief showed that “out-of-state buyers have had little meaningful effect, if any, on the large increase in Hawaii housing prices over the past 14 years.”
She quoted Institute President Keli‘i Akina to the effect that if Hawaii policymakers really want to solve Hawaii’s housing crisis, they should focus on reducing the state’s many housing-related regulations, which, as the report noted, are significantly correlated with high median home prices.
The report also generated multiple interview requests. Among those is Peter Kay‘s online program “Living In Hawaii,” on which Akina is scheduled to appear today at 9 a.m. The topic will be “Are outsiders responsible for Hawaii’s high real estate prices?” Viewers are invited to submit questions.
On Sunday, Aug. 28, starting at 9 a.m., Akina will talk about the report with host Johnny Miro on the H. Hawaii Media network of Oahu radio stations, including 101.1 FM, and online at Hawaiistream.fm.
And on Thursday, Sept. 8, starting at 10 a.m., Ahokovi will appear on the ThinkTech Hawaii network’s “Talking Tax” program, co-hosted by Tom Yamachika, president of the Tax Foundation of Hawaii, and ThinkTech Hawaii president Jay Fidell.
One reason the study is being taken so seriously is that it is the first to look at home-buying data from not only Hawaii but all 50 states and the District of Columbia, as well as more than 2,300 counties nationwide. In addition, it includes insights from many prominent economists and real estate experts, both locally and nationally.
If you haven’t read the report yet, you can find a copy of it here. You also can buy a copy from Amazon.com, where four other Institute research papers also are available for purchase, at prices ranging from $3.71 to $7.
To see the Institute’s Wednesday news release about the report, go here.
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