From the male bar chart, we can see that there are more elders (60+) percentage wise in Hawai'i than in the USA. We can also see that Americans edge out the Hawai'ians in the middle age category (40s & 50s). Hawai'i has a slight edge in the 20s and 30s, while USA has the edge in youngsters (0-19), with a bigger gap from 10-19.
From the female bar chart, we can see that generally these same trends from the male chart repeat themselves except for age groups 0-9 and 20-29 where Hawai'i and USA now each have the lead respectively.
From both of these charts and the inferences above, we can see that Hawai'i generally has a higher percentage of older people and the USA has a slightly younger population overall.
From the Hawai'i chart, we can see that the amount of males vs females is even with a very slight margin favoring the females. From the USA chart, we essentially see the same trend as in the Hawai'i chart except the scale is a bit more in favor of females with the percentages being 49.2 to 50.8. These charts tell us that in both Hawai'i and USA, the gender ratio is in the favor of the females but only by a slight margin.
From the graphics to the left of this, we can see the median age of people in Hawai'i vs people in the USA. Based on these graphics, we can infer that Hawai'i generally has older people than the USA which backs up the observations we made in the bar graphs. Each age group, whether it be male, female, or both, shows that Hawai'i has a slightly older population.