Friday, September 22, 2023

US 202O Census: A majority of Native Hawaiians don't live in Hawaii

    US CENSUS BUREAU


    HIGHLIGHTS
  • Native Hawaiian was the largest Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander (NHPI) alone group (199,880) and alone or in any combination group (680,442).
  •  Nearly all NHPI groups grew from 2010 to 2020. The Chuukese alone population was the fastest growing NHPI alone group, increasing 296.2% to 10,500 in 2020.
  • The fastest growing NHPI alone or in any combination group was Papua New Guinean, which increased by 249.3% to 1,453 people during the decade.

There are more Native Hawaiians living on the Mainland than in Hawaii, according to a report from the US Census released Thursday.

Less than half of the Native Hawaiian alone or in any combination population lived in Hawaii (46.7%) in 2020, down from 55.0% in 2010.

That finding is based on the data collected in 2020, the exodus of Native Hawaiians from their homeland continues in 2023 exacerbated by the high cost of living in the island state.

On a county-by-county basis, the top three counties with Native Hawaiians  are, in descending order, are Honolulu, Hawaii and Maui. The next two are Clark County, Nevada (which includes Las Vegas) and San Diego County in California.

“The truth is, we see it. We see our people moving. We hear about it,” said Kuhio Lewis, CEO of the Council for Native Hawaiian Advancement.

“This is our families, this is our neighbors, this is our friends. So we felt this trajectory coming a long time ago,” he told Hawaii News Now.

A lot of Native Hawaiians have moved to California. The Golden State also appears to be the favored destinations for immigrants from Pacific nations and territories of the US. It is home to the largest communities of Samoans, Chamorros, Tongans, Fijians and Marshalese.

The information about Native Hawaiians and other Pacific Islanders was part of a treasure trove of data gathered from the US Census. 

The Census Bureau's press release follows:

Newly released results from the 2020 Census Detailed Demographic and Housing Characteristics File A show that the populations of nearly all the 31 detailed Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander (NHPI) groups grew over the past decade.



The Chuukese alone population was the fastest growing NHPI alone group, increasing 296.2% to 10,500 people from 2010 to 2020, according to the 2020 Census data released today.

The fastest growing NHPI alone or in any combination group was the Papua New Guinean alone or in any combination population, which increased by 249.3%, to 1,453 people during the same period.

In this article, we discuss data from the race question on detailed race alone and race alone or in any combination populations.  

The race alone population represents the minimum number of people who identified as that detailed group, and includes respondents who reported one response, such as Native Hawaiian.

The race alone or in any combination population includes respondents who reported one response, such as Native Hawaiian, and those who reported more than one, such as Native Hawaiian and Samoan or Native Hawaiian and Asian. The race alone or in any combination population represents the maximum number of people who identified as that detailed group.  

This information is important to frame the discussion of racial and ethnic composition and help us understand our country’s changing demographics as it becomes much more multiracial.

Change in detailed NHPI groups: 2010-2020

Nearly all detailed NHPI groups grew over the decade. Detailed NHPI alone or in any combination groups with smaller populations in 2010 (less than 50,000) tended to grow faster over the decade.

The Papua New Guinean, Chuukese, Ni-Vanuatu, Carolinian, Pohnpeian, Kosraean, Marshallese, I-Kiribati and Yapese alone or in any combination populations more than doubled, increasing more than 100% in 2020.

Detailed NHPI groups with larger populations in 2010 (greater than 50,000) more frequently grew at slower rates but remained the largest detailed NHPI groups in 2020.

The Native Hawaiian alone or in any combination population grew by 29.1% from 527,077 in 2010 to 680,442 in 2020. It remained the largest NHPI alone or in any combination group in 2020, comprising nearly 43% of the NHPI alone or in combination population in the United States.

The Native Hawaiian alone population was also the largest NHPI alone group (199,880 or 29.0%) and grew 28.0% between 2010 and 2020.

The Samoan population continued to be the second-largest detailed NHPI alone or in any combination group (256,997) and the second-largest detailed NHPI alone group (133,148), representing 16.2% of the NHPI alone or in combination population and 19.3% of the NHPI alone population.

The Samoan alone population grew by 21.4% and the Samoan alone or in any combination population grew by 39.3%.

Chamorro was the third-largest detailed NHPI group, with 10.2% of the NHPI alone population identifying as Chamorro alone (70,704) and 9.1% of the NHPI alone or in combination population identifying as Chamorro alone or in any combination (143,947).

The Chamorro population was the only detailed NHPI group that experienced population loss in both their alone (down 19.9%) and alone or in any combination (down 2.6%) populations. These declines are not surprising because of the improvements made to the 2020 Census to disaggregate data for the Chamorro and Guamanian populations and may also be related to demographic changes over the past ten years.

The next largest detailed NHPI alone or in any combination groups were Tongan, Fijian and Marshallese, which all had populations over 50,000.

        FYI: 


Detailed NHPI Population Shifts in States


The proportions of several detailed NHPI groups living in California and Hawaii declined while the shares of these populations increased in other states across the country.

Arkansas had the largest proportion of the Marshallese alone or in any combination population in the country, which was a change from 2010 when the largest share was in Hawaii.

From 2010 to 2020, the share of the Marshallese population living in Hawaii dropped from 33.0% to 18.8%, while the share living in Arkansas increased from 19.3% to 23.1%.

California had the largest proportions of the Samoan, Chamorro, Tongan and Fijian alone or in any combination populations in the country, though the shares of these populations living in the state declined.

Less than half of the Native Hawaiian alone or in any combination population lived in Hawaii (46.7%) in 2020, down from 55.0% in 2010.

Only one of the six largest NHPI groups had its population concentrated in one state in 2020: Over 70% of the Fijian alone or in any combination population lived in California and no other state had more than 10% of this group.

EDITOR'S NOTE: For additional commentary, news and views from an AANHPI perspective, follow me at Threads.net/eduardodiok@DioknoEd on Twitter or at the blog Views From the Edge.

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