Building a Housing Market for Hawaiʻi’s Working Families
Good Health Depends on Decent Housing
January 2022
Introduction
Good health depends on decent housing. But how can we bridge the significant gulf between the state’s high cost of housing and what most residents can afford?
Part Three of our Health & Housing series highlights the disconnect between the state’s housing market and the needs of its residents, and outlines policy approaches and best practices that should be used to guide housing development in Hawaiʻi for decades to come.
Every person, every family needs a decent, secure home. Housing is the foundation for human dignity and wellbeing and this, in turn, profoundly influences health, economic mobility, and thriving communities. Underscoring this fundamental need, sociologist Matthew Desmond wrote that the development of affordable housing is “an antipoverty effort, human capital investment, community improvement plan, and public health initiative all rolled into one.”
Too often, the policy choice in the United States is to treat land and housing as a profit-generating commodity. In Hawaiʻi, this policy is most clearly demonstrated through the systematic separation of Native Hawaiians from their ancestral lands, and the very limited public effort that has been made to restore their rights to self-determination.
Because we have failed to recognize the transcendent value of land and homes to the wellbeing of individuals and our communities, we have not embraced a policy that protects the right to adequate housing for low- and middle-income families. Our housing policy failures clearly result in lifelong harm to the individuals affected, but the damage doesn't end there. These failures come at a high cost to all of us, and one of the most notable is expensive health disparities.