PodcastsBusiness NewsThe Missing Middle Podcast

The Missing Middle Podcast

Cara Stern, Mike Moffatt, and Meredith Martin
The Missing Middle Podcast
Latest episode

183 episodes

  • The Missing Middle Podcast

    Answering Your Biggest Questions About Canada’s Housing Crisis

    2026-06-03 | 16 mins.
    Why are young Canadians leaving cities? Why are seniors staying in homes that are too big for them? And can Canada lower housing costs without cutting quality of life even further?
    In this listener Q&A episode of The Missing Middle, Sabrina Maddeaux and Cara Stern answer audience questions on housing affordability, immigration, downsizing, social isolation, wage stagnation, the Greenbelt, and why building more “missing middle” housing has become so difficult in Canada.
    Topics covered:
    Why seniors aren’t downsizing
    The shortage of family-sized homes
    Housing prices vs stagnant wages
    Social isolation and unaffordable cities
    Immigration and housing demand
    The Greenbelt debate
    What young Canadians can do politically
    If you enjoy the episode, subscribe and leave a comment with your own question for a future mailbag episode.

    Eamon 
    Seniors are lonely, rich, and live in houses that are too big, often in desirable neighbourhoods. Young people are desperate for housing, poor, and looking for roommates. Why not create a tax incentive for seniors to free up rooms in their houses for young people? I think a vacancy tax is punitive, but a tax incentive could unlock housing in a win-win (rather than zero sum) way for willing participants. Thoughts? 

    Kate
    In your second-time homebuyer article you mention that various government initiatives could lower newly built housing costs by up to 15% which would free up more family sized homes "making it easier for seniors to downsize". How would lowering the cost of newly built homes by 15% make it easier for seniors to downsize? In my view, the more significant factor facing senior downsizers is not the cost of new housing but the scarcity of appealing post-move options for them. 

    Mary (edited for length) 
    I am a boomer with two millennial children who haven't yet reached middle-class milestones like stable employment or homeownership. I believe factors other than parental status are at play: 1) Are houses more expensive, or are incomes simply failing to keep up with declining purchasing power? 2) Given the rise in single-person households, why is there so much social isolation, and how does the difficulty of making connections in urban environments impact the ability for young people to save and enter the housing market?

    Chris Jeanneret and came from the comments section of our Greenbelt episode: 
    Is the Greenbelt even practical for "affordable" housing, or does it only provide more land for luxury country estates? 

    @canucklhead 
    Isn't the obvious solution here to keep immigration low for the next few years to keep pressuring rents lower? Wouldn't this be the easiest solution to help affordability for everyone? 

    Emily writes: 
    I see what is happening to those under 25 and it is awful. How can I get involved? What steps can I take that will make the most difference? Do you know of a group in Edmonton organizing that is making a real difference especially in the "missing middle". 

    Chapters: 

    00:00Mailbag Special: Your Housing Questions Answered
    00:23Should Seniors Rent Out Empty Bedrooms?
    02:57Will Cheaper New Homes Help Seniors Downsize?
    05:07Why Millennials Are Falling Behind
    06:00Social Isolation, Third Places & Housing Costs
    08:05How Housing Affordability Breaks Friendships and Communities
    10:54Can the Greenbelt Deliver Affordable Housing?
    12:43Is Lower Immigration the Fastest Path to Affordability?
    14:16What Canadians Can Do to Push for Change

    Research/links:

    The Disappearing "Third Place": Why Making Friends Is Getting Harder
    https://youtu.be/WYFTsrvwr0o?si=IIGS4jllTN2dKT5h

    Grow Together Edmonton
    https://www.growtogetheryeg.com/

    Hosted by Mike Moffatt & Cara Stern & Sabrina Maddeaux
    Produced by Meredith Martin
    Funded by the Neptis Foundation https://neptis.org/
  • The Missing Middle Podcast

    The Story Behind Canada’s Collapsing Fertility Rate

    2026-05-29 | 21 mins.
    Canada’s fertility rate has fallen to just 1.25 children per woman, one of the lowest in the developed world. But what’s actually driving the decline? Are fewer Canadians having children, or are the ones having kids simply choosing to have fewer of them?
    In this episode of DemograFix, ⁠Mike Moffatt and ⁠Cara Stern break down the data behind Canada’s collapsing birth rate. They explore why more women are remaining childless, why one-child families have become the norm, and how housing costs, delayed parenthood, childcare, culture, and changing lifestyles are reshaping family formation across the country.
    Topics discussed:
    Why Vancouver and Victoria have some of the world’s lowest fertility rates
    The surprising link between housing affordability and birth rates
    Why millennials and Gen Z still say they want kids
    How family sizes changed from the 1980s to today
    Whether education actually reduces fertility
    Why cities are losing young families
    The growing gap between the number of children Canadians want and the number they actually have
    If Canada wants higher birth rates, what would it actually take to make raising children affordable again?
    #Canada #HousingCrisis #FertilityRate #BirthRate #Millennials #GenZ #Economy #Housing #Population #Parenting #Childcare #CanadianPolitics #Demographics #TheMissingMiddle
    Chapters:
    00:00 Introduction: Canada’s Ultra-Low Fertility Rate
    01:08 What Fertility Rates Measure — And Why Canada Is Different
    01:59 Housing Costs, Cities, and Why Young Families Are Leaving
    03:49 Are Fewer Women Having Children?
    04:32 Delayed Parenthood and The Rise In Childlessness
    06:01 Marriage, Religion, Immigration, and Fertility Trends
    08:03 Does Higher Education Actually Reduce Birth Rates?
    10:24 From Three-Child Families To One-Child Households
    12:26 Housing Costs, Bedrooms, and Raising Kids In Canada
    14:22 Canadians Still Want More Children
    17:28 From Overpopulation Fears To Population Collapse
    19:44 The Growing Gap Between Family Goals and Reality
    20:05 What Governments Could Do To Make Raising Kids Easier

    Research/links:
    Proportion of women aged 20 to 49 without children, by age group and selected sociodemographic characteristics, 2024
    https://www150.statcan.gc.ca/n1/daily-quotidien/260126/t001a-eng.htm

    ‘One and Done’ is the new norm: inside Canada’s growing one-child family trend
    https://www.babycenter.ca/a25053886/one-and-done-is-the-new-norm-inside-Canadas-growing-one-child-family-trend 

    Living arrangements of children in Canada: A century of change
    https://publications.gc.ca/collections/collection_2014/statcan/75-006-x/75-006-2014001-4-eng.pdf

    Fertility in Canada, 1921 to 2022
    https://www150.statcan.gc.ca/n1/pub/91f0015m/91f0015m2024001-eng.htm 

    Credits:
    Mike Moffatt https://twitter.com/MikePMoffatt
    https://bsky.app/profile/mikepmoffatt.bsky.social

    Cara Stern https://x.com/carastern
    https://bsky.app/profile/carastern.bsky.social

    Meredith Martin  https://twitter.com/meredithmartin
    https://bsky.app/profile/meredithmartin.bsky.social

    Sean Foreman @seanegertonforeman
    https://bsky.app/profile/seanforeman.bsky.social

    University of Ottawa Co-op Student,  Kelly Hoban

    Brought to you by the Missing Middle Initiative https://www.missingmiddleinitiative.ca/

    Hosted by Mike Moffatt & Cara Stern & Sabrina Maddeaux
    Produced by Meredith Martin
    Funded by the Neptis Foundation https://neptis.org/
  • The Missing Middle Podcast

    Why Canada Will NEVER Tax Your Home Profits

    2026-05-27 | 18 mins.
    Why are Canadians allowed to sell their homes tax-free while profits from stocks and investments get taxed? And is that policy making Canada’s housing crisis even worse?
    In this episode of Classonomics Sabrina Maddeaux and Mike Moffatt break down Canada’s capital gains exemption on primary residences, why it exists, why politicians are terrified to touch it, and whether it’s contributing to skyrocketing home prices and inequality between homeowners and renters.
    They explore the history of the tax exemption, why attempts to change it spark political outrage, how other countries handle housing taxes, and whether taxing home profits would actually make housing more affordable. Plus, they discuss property taxes, downsizing, investor advantages, generational inequality, and why even “common sense” housing reforms have become politically impossible in Canada.
    Topics covered:
    Canada’s capital gains exemption on homes
    Housing affordability and inequality
    Why homeowners are politically powerful
    How other countries tax housing wealth
    Property taxes and downsizing
    Investors vs families in the housing market
    The politics of housing reform in Canada
    Why fixing housing has become so difficult
    #Canada #HousingCrisis #RealEstate #Taxes #HousingMarket #CanadianPolitics #Economics #TheMissingMiddle

    Chapters:
    00:00 Why Canada Doesn’t Tax Gains on Your Primary Home
    01:17 Why Politicians Won’t Touch the Primary Residence Exemption
    04:06 The History of Canada’s Capital Gains Exemption
    05:28 How Other Countries Handle Housing Capital Gains
    07:25 Does the Exemption Actually Worsen the Housing Crisis?
    10:39 The Case Against Taxing Primary Residences
    13:26 Better Alternatives: Tax Fairness Without Capital Gains Reform
    16:06 Why Even Good Housing Policy Can Be Politically Impossible

    Research:
    Canada should look to Australia on eliminating barriers to downsizing for seniors
    https://www.theglobeandmail.com/investing/personal-finance/article-housing-baby-boomers-suburban-homes-young-families/

    CBC article from a few years ago: https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/the-conservatives-misleading-claims-about-a-secret-liberal-housing-tax-1.5312873 

    26 of 40:
    https://view.asiae.co.kr/en/article/2022032109551988175 

    History of cap gains taxes:
    https://www.ctf.ca/EN/EN/Newsletters/Perspectives/2021/3/210304.aspx

    Hosted by Mike Moffatt & Cara Stern & Sabrina Maddeaux
    Produced by Meredith Martin
    Funded by the Neptis Foundation https://neptis.org/
  • The Missing Middle Podcast

    The Hidden Algorithm Deciding What You Pay

    2026-05-22 | 25 mins.
    What if companies could figure out the exact maximum you’re willing to pay, and charge you exactly that?

    That’s the promise of surveillance pricing: using your personal data, purchase history, location, online behavior, and even financial information to tailor prices specifically to you.

    In this episode, Cara Stern talks with Vass Bednar, managing director of the Canadian Shield Institute and author of The Big Fix, about why this issue is suddenly on the political agenda in Canada, and what it means for consumers.

    They discuss:
    What surveillance pricing is, and how it differs from ordinary dynamic pricing
    How companies use your data to predict your “willingness to pay”
    Why two people could see different prices for the exact same product
    The real-world examples already happening with apps, airlines, and delivery platforms

    Why 83% of Canadians say this practice should be banned or regulated
    What governments can actually do to stop it

    Chapters:

    Research/links:

    Everything Costs More Because the Algorithm Says So | The Walrus
    https://thewalrus.ca/everything-costs-more-because-the-algorithm-says-so/
    How Corporate Consolidation is Ruining Everything: Discussion with Denise Hearn and Vass Bednar
    https://youtu.be/Uz5DkpZPH2k?si=M_c-2GX4dS7wKF9l

    Canadians Are Skeptical of Algorithmic Pricing - Abacus Data
    https://abacusdata.ca/canadians-are-deeply-skeptical-of-algorithmic-pricing-and-want-governments-to-intervene/

    AI-Driven Pricing May Be the Next Shock to Canadian Grocery Shoppers
    https://retail-insider.com/retail-insider/2025/12/ai-driven-pricing-may-be-the-next-shock-to-canadian-grocery-shoppers/

    Algorithms are raising prices for everything. This must stop - The Globe and Mail
    https://www.theglobeandmail.com/business/commentary/article-algorithms-are-raising-prices-for-everything-this-must-stop/

    Avi Lewis is smart to shed light on surveillance pricing | Canada's National Observer: Climate News
    https://www.nationalobserver.com/2026/04/24/news/avi-lewis-ndp-surveillance-pricing

    Algorithmic pricing: Poll finds half of Canadians against
    https://www.cp24.com/news/canada/2026/03/18/most-canadians-want-to-ban-or-regulate-algorithmic-pricing-poll-shows/?lid=8z3lanxo654a
    Hosted by Mike Moffatt & Cara Stern & Sabrina Maddeaux
    Produced by Meredith Martin
    Funded by the Neptis Foundation https://neptis.org/
  • The Missing Middle Podcast

    Why Mark Carney Wants Canada’s Own “Norway Fund”

    2026-05-20 | 12 mins.
    Canada is launching a new sovereign wealth fund, but what exactly is it, and why is Prime Minister Mark Carney betting big on it?
    In this episode of Classonomics, Mike Moffatt and Meredith Martin break down the proposed Canada Strong Fund, how sovereign wealth funds work, and why comparisons to Norway’s famous $2 trillion oil fund may not tell the full story. They explore whether debt-financed infrastructure investing can actually grow the economy, why critics are calling it a “sovereign debt fund,” and what this could mean for housing, ports, transit, energy infrastructure, and future generations of Canadians.
    Topics covered:
    • What sovereign wealth funds actually are
    • How Norway built its trillion-dollar oil fund
    • Why Canada is creating the Canada Strong Fund
    • The debate over debt-financed infrastructure
    • How infrastructure investment affects housing and economic growth
    • The risks, criticisms, and unanswered questions surrounding the fund
    Chapters: 
    00:00 Introduction to Sovereign Wealth Funds
    00:41 What is a Sovereign Wealth Fund?
    01:29 Norway’s Two Sovereign Wealth Funds Explained
    03:19 Why Norway Created a Second Fund
    05:13 How Canada’s Fund Differs From Norway’s
    06:28 Criticism Over Debt Financing
    08:22 Will the Fund Benefit Future Generations?
    09:58 Why the Announcement Confused Canadians
    12:03 Final Thoughts And Outro

    Research/links:

    The Canada Strong Fund: Nation-Building or State Venture Capitalism?
    https://www.asiapacific.ca/publication/canada-strong-fund-nation-building-or-state-venture-capitalism

    What Canada can learn from Norway's Sovereign Wealth Fund
    https://www.mjemcgill.com/articles/what-canada-can-learn-from-norways-sovereign-wealth-fund

    Our pension funds must be sovereign wealth funds, too – even if pensioners take a hit
    https://www.theglobeandmail.com/business/commentary/article-our-pension-funds-must-be-sovereign-wealth-funds-too-even-if/

    Canada's spring budget projects economy to grow and deficit to fall
    https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cz0278zyznjo

    Neither Norway nor Singapore: Decoding Canada’s new sovereign wealth fund
    https://globalnews.ca/news/11825911/norway-singapore-canada-sovereign-wealth-fund/

    Hosted by Mike Moffatt & Cara Stern & Sabrina Maddeaux
    Produced by Meredith Martin
    Funded by the Neptis Foundation https://neptis.org/
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About The Missing Middle Podcast
Welcome to the Missing Middle, a podcast about why the middle class in Canada is disappearing. We hope to help you understand why life is becoming unaffordable for so many in this country, and what can be done to reverse course.
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