PodcastsNewsThe Missing Middle Podcast

The Missing Middle Podcast

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

145 episodes

  • The Missing Middle Podcast

    The Hidden Tax on City Living: How Crime and Disorder Undermine Density

    2026-1-21 | 22 mins.
    From breath mints and car break-ins to bouncers at the Rogers store, urban life is starting to feel a lot more “on alert.” In this episode of The Missing Middle, Mike Moffatt and Sabrina Maddeaux examine the rise of crime and disorder in our cities, as well as the disturbing data behind transit violence. However, this isn’t just about safety; it’s about the future of our neighbourhoods. If people don’t feel safe on the streetcar or the sidewalk, can we ever truly build the dense, walkable, “missing middle” communities Canada so desperately needs?
    This surge in disorder acts as a "hidden tax" on urban living, forcing residents to choose between the convenience of the city and the perceived security of the suburbs. By analyzing these shifts, we uncover how a lack of safety might be the biggest hurdle yet to solving our housing goals.
    Chapters:
    00:00 Introduction: Crime, Disorder, and the Future of Cities
    00:50 Car Break-ins and Security Measures
    04:23 Personal Experiences on the Streetcar
    05:02 By the Numbers: Rising Assaults on Canadian Transit
    07:07 Why Density Requires Public Trust
    09:00 Why Spouting Stats Doesn't Change Minds
    13:58 The Political Disconnect on Urban Safety
    16:49 Finding Solutions: Justice Reform and Mental Health
    18:10 Why "visible progress" matters more than spreadsheets

    Research links:

    Transit violence rising across Canada — in some cities by nearly 300%

    Chris Arnande tweet

    The Slow-Motion Exodus: How GTA Outmigration Became Ontario’s Defining Trend

    The Politics of Safety: Why Bail Reform Is Striking a Chord with Canadians

    Sabrina Maddeaux: Canada’s suburban crime surge is exposing years of national security neglect

    It's Time to Talk About America's Disorder Problem

    Related reading/listening:
    OFF THE RAILS: Data exposes crime, mental illness at TTC’s track level
    More than 70 per cent of Ontarians feel less safe on transit than a year ago, survey suggests
    Homelessness, Social Disorder and Public Transit in Calgary, Canada: Examining perspectives from law enforcement through the lens of critical social theory

    Hosted by Mike Moffatt & Cara Stern & Sabrina Maddeaux
    Produced by Meredith Martin
    This podcast is funded by the Neptis Foundation and brought to you by the Smart Prosperity Institute.
  • The Missing Middle Podcast

    How Birth Year Shapes Your Economic Future

    2026-1-16 | 24 mins.
    From avocado toast jokes to accusations of entitlement, every generation seems to get its turn in the stereotype spotlight. In this episode of The Missing Middle, economist Mike Moffatt and journalist Cara Stern dig into where these labels come from — and, more importantly, whether generations really do experience the economy differently.

    They explore how major historical shocks — from the Great Depression and World War II to 9/11, the Great Recession, and the pandemic — shape our values, anxieties, and opportunities. The conversation moves beyond clichés to examine how birth year, cohort size, housing markets, job markets, technology, and public policy combine to create very different economic realities for Boomers, Gen X, Millennials, and Gen Z.

    Chapters:
    00:00 Introduction
    00:37 Avocado toast & generational stereotypes
    03:25 Horriscopes for statistical nerds?
    04:46 The history of grouping people into generations
    06:41 Mike’s genX and Cara’s millennial experiences 
    13:24 Understanding generational differences
    15:55 Generation size, power & public Policy
    19:40 Inherited wealth & pulling the ladder up
    22:30 The ethos of DemograFix

    Research/links:
    https://marcuse.faculty.history.ucsb.edu/classes/201/articles/27MannheimGenerations.pdf

    Hosted by Mike Moffatt & Cara Stern & Sabrina Maddeaux
    Produced by Meredith Martin
    This podcast is funded by the Neptis Foundation and brought to you by the Smart Prosperity Institute.
  • The Missing Middle Podcast

    Did the Greenbelt Break Ontario’s Housing System?

    2026-1-14 | 33 mins.
    Ontario’s Greenbelt is often treated as untouchable — but is it actually making the housing crisis worse?In this episode of The Missing Middle, Mike Moffatt and Sabrina Maddeaux tackle the question viewers keep asking: can Ontario build enough family-friendly homes without touching the Greenbelt — and what happens if it doesn’t? They unpack how the Greenbelt was sold as a social contract, why governments never delivered the missing middle housing they promised, and how policies meant to stop sprawl may have actually pushed families farther away.
    The conversation breaks down four realistic paths forward: doing nothing, finally legalizing family-sized infill housing, cutting immigration to ease demand, or partially opening the Greenbelt — and why every option is politically fraught. Along the way, they explain leapfrog sprawl, why condos aren’t working for families, and how decades of policy avoidance have left young Canadians priced out and disillusioned.
    If you care about housing affordability, family-friendly neighborhoods, or the future of Ontario’s cities, this episode lays out the uncomfortable trade-offs politicians keep avoiding.

    Chapters:

    00:00 – Introduction
    00:47 – The Most Common Audience Question
    01:50 – Is the Greenbelt Politically Untouchable Now?
    05:23 – The Greenbelt’s Broken Social Contract
    10:05 – What Families Actually Need in a Home
    11:35 – How the Greenbelt Makes Sprawl Worse
    14:00 – Has Anyone Studied Greenbelt Sprawl?
    15:00 – Four Options for Housing vs the Greenbelt
    15:53 - Option 1: Do Nothing
    18:31 – Option 2: Fix Housing Without Expansion
    23:48 – Option 3: Cutting Immigration
    27:15 – Option 4: Opening the Greenbelt
    29:55 – What’s Most Likely to Happen Next?

    Research/links:
    Mike’s tweet
    https://x.com/MikePMoffatt/status/1991593178085142851?s=20

    London’s Garden Belt:
    https://x.com/JenMTreadwell/status/2001256081188905271?s=20

    The Welfare Effects of Greenbelt Policy: Evidence from England
    https://academic.oup.com/ej/article/134/657/363/7276598

    Green Belts: Past; present; future?
    https://www.routledge.com/Green-Belts-Past-present-future/Sturzaker-Mell/p/book/9781138339392

    Hosted by Mike Moffatt & Cara Stern & Sabrina Maddeaux
    Produced by Meredith Martin
    This podcast is funded by the Neptis Foundation and brought to you by the Smart Prosperity Institute.
  • The Missing Middle Podcast

    Ask Me Anything: Housing, Transit, and Our Podcast’s Future

    2026-1-07 | 31 mins.
    In this special Ask Me Anything episode of The Missing Middle, the full team answers your biggest viewer questions on housing, transit, immigration, and affordability — and we share a major announcement about the future of the podcast. We also introduce our newest team member and talk candidly about why this work hits close to home for so many Canadians.

    The conversation dives into walkable neighbourhoods and small businesses, why governments struggle to act on housing affordability, the taboo around discussing immigration and housing together, transit as a pressure valve for urban sprawl, and why seniors are stuck in family-sized homes. Plus, we explain what’s changing on the show, including two new weekly episodes, DemograFix and Classonomics, and what it means for listeners going forward.

    Chapters
    00:00 Ask Me Anything 2025 and look ahead
    00:45 Meet our editor/technical producer Sean Foreman
    03:01 Introducing the new podcast DemograFix
    03:52 Introducing Classonomics
    04:16 You don’t need to do anything, we promise 🙂
    05:01 Meredith’s take on the future of Missing Middle podcasts
    07:29 Question from Matthieu Gagnon about walkability
    09:56 Rahim Ismail’s Question about the government being out of touch
    12:34 Examining the intentionality of the government's lack of response
    15:36 Chosing one stakeholder over another
    16:46  Vanessa MacDonald’s question about talking about immigration policy
    20:49 Daniel D'Angela’s question about good transit
    22:57 Seniors downsizing and banning all foreign ownership

    Research/links:

    Can Tax Reform Help Young People Afford Homes?
    https://youtu.be/rW9QZ91lF9k?si=lep3WbEYfmZATaUQ

    2025 Provincial HOMES Report Card
    https://www.missingmiddleinitiative.ca/p/2025-provincial-homes-report-card

    The Positive Utility of the Commute: Modeling Ideal Commute Time and Relative Desired Commute Amount
    https://www.researchgate.net/publication/263313349_The_Positive_Utility_of_the_Commute_Modeling_Ideal_Commute_Time_and_Relative_Desired_Commute_Amount

    Measuring the Local Economic Impacts of Replacing On-Street Parking With Bike Lanes
    https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/01944363.2019.1638816

    Hosted by Mike Moffatt & Cara Stern & Sabrina Maddeaux
    Produced by Meredith Martin
    This podcast is funded by the Neptis Foundation and brought to you by the Smart Prosperity Institute.
  • The Missing Middle Podcast

    Fixing Canada’s Health Data Rules Without Killing Innovation

    2025-12-17 | 11 mins.
    Is Canada’s life sciences and health tech sector heading toward a code red? In this episode, Sabrina Maddeaux and Mike Moffatt unpack how outdated and fragmented privacy laws are slowing innovation, and why aligning too closely with European regulations could make things even worse. They explore the “Brussels effect,” where the EU’s regulatory power shapes rules far beyond Europe, and how Canada may already be feeling its impact.

    The conversation dives into why modern health innovation depends on large-scale data, how Canada’s patchwork of federal and provincial rules creates costly barriers, and what lessons we could learn from countries like Japan and Singapore instead.

    Chapters:
    00:00 Introduction
    00:44 The Brussels Effect explained
    03:17 Outdated health-data and privacy rules
    04:13 Accessing lifescience data
    06:00 Safety vs innovation
    07:40 Europe lacks tech innovation
    08:55 We’re already adopting EU rules
    09:28 Asia leads the way in healthtech data regulation

    Research:
    Health Innovation Doesn’t Have to Be This Hard
    https://www.missingmiddleinitiative.ca/p/health-innovation-doesnt-have-to?utm_campaign=post&utm_medium=web

    The Draghi report on EU competitiveness
    https://commission.europa.eu/topics/competitiveness/draghi-report_en

    Hosted by Mike Moffatt & Cara Stern & Sabrina Maddeaux
    Produced by Meredith Martin
    This podcast is funded by the Neptis Foundation and brought to you by the Smart Prosperity Institute.

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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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