• The Disappearing "Third Place": Why Making Friends Is Getting Harder
    Feb 20 2026

    Why is it so hard to make friends once you leave school? In this episode of The Missing Middle, Cara Stern and Mike Moffatt dive into the "Loneliness Epidemic" and the disappearing concept of the Third Place – those vital social hubs that aren't home (the first place) or work (the second place).


    From the 1980s mall culture and bowling alleys to the modern era of "convenience-first" coffee shops and endless doomscrolling, we explore why 60% of Canadians feel disconnected from their communities. We also break down the surprising 2025 StatCan data showing that young people (15–24) are significantly lonelier than seniors.

    In this episode, we discuss:

    The Zoning Crisis: Why it’s literally illegal to build a walkable pub or café in most North American suburbs.

    The Death of the Comfy Chair: How rising land costs forced businesses to prioritize drive-thrus over community "hangouts."

    Weak Social Ties: Why interacting with people outside your "bubble" is essential for democracy, your mental health, and your career.

    Practical Advice: Cara shares her (slightly terrifying) tips for meeting neighbours, and Mike discusses how rec sports saved his social life.

    Chapters:
    00:00 The Connectivity Paradox: Why we’re lonelier than ever
    01:40 Youth are lonelier than seniors
    03:10 The "Doom Scrolling" effect on community connection
    04:10 What is a "Third Place"? (And why you need one)
    05:20 The power of "Weak Social Ties"
    07:34 How Zoning & NIMBYism killed our local hangouts
    12:18 Can Digital Communities Replace Physical Ones?
    14:58 High Land Costs Make Everything Worse
    17:08 Practical Advice: How to Build Community Today
    20:41 The Senior Discount Problem: Why cities are ignoring youth isolation
    22:10 How to Push Past Rejection & Find Your People

    Research/links:


    Six in Ten Canadians Surveyed Have Little or No Sense of Community, New YMCA Research Reveals

    https://www.ymcagta.org/news/Six-in-Ten-Canadians-Surveyed-Have-Little-or-No-Sense-of-Community

    Church Closures and the Loss of Community Social Capital

    https://carleton.ca/panl/wp-content/uploads/Church-Closures-and-the-Loss-of-Community-Social-Capital-By-Don-McRae-March-2023.pdf

    Where Have All the Great, Good Places Gone?: The Decline of the “Third Place”

    https://www.mironline.ca/where-have-all-the-great-good-places-gone-the-decline-of-the-third-place/

    Third places, true citizen spaces

    https://courier.unesco.org/en/articles/third-places-true-citizen-spaces

    Brands should provide “third places” to help Canadians feel connected:

    https://strategyonline.ca/2024/11/11/citizen-relations-report-third-places/

    The Hidden Health Crisis: Understanding Loneliness in Canada
    https://blog.theralist.ca/the-hidden-health-crisis-understanding-loneliness-in-canada/

    Why your ‘weak-tie’ friendships may mean more than you think
    https://www.bbc.com/worklife/article/20200701-why-your-weak-tie-friendships-may-mean-more-than-you-think


    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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    24 Min.
  • The Hidden Job Market Crisis No One Is Talking About
    Feb 18 2026

    The unemployment rate says everything is fine. So why does finding a job feel impossible?

    Canada has added nearly 200,000 jobs and unemployment sits around 6.5%. On paper, that’s a “normal” economy. But talk to young workers, or anyone trying to switch jobs, and you’ll hear a very different story: hundreds of applications, zero callbacks, and months of silence.

    In this episode of Classonomics, Sabrina Maddeaux and Mike Moffatt break down the hidden story behind the headlines. They explain why low unemployment can mask a frozen job market — one with fewer layoffs, fewer hires, and far fewer opportunities for people trying to get in.

    If you’re a recent grad, stuck in your career, or wondering why the economy feels worse than the data suggests, this episode is for you.

    Tell us in the comments: How long has your job search taken? Has it been harder than expected?



    Chapters:

    00:00 – Why Finding a Job in Canada Feels Impossible Right Now

    01:57 – Beyond Unemployment: The Hidden Labour Market Indicators

    05:28 – Why Employers Have the Upper Hand Right Now

    06:12 – Global Uncertainty, Trade Tensions & Hiring Freezes

    07:26 – The "Low-Hire, Low-Fire" Equilibrium Explained

    10:21 – How Over-Regulation Stifles Economic Growth

    13:06 – The Systemic Impact of Locking Out a Generation

    14:20 – The Housing Theory of Everything


    Research:

    Consulting the Magic 8 Ball of Canada’s Job Market

    The Job Market Is Frozen:Unemployment is low, but workers aren’t quitting and businesses aren’t hiring. What’s going on?

    Canada’s shifting labour market: Recalibrating ‘breakeven employment’

    Glassdoor Worklife Trends 2025

    Employment by industry, monthly, seasonally adjusted and unadjusted, and trend-cycle, last 5 months (x 1,000) 1, 2, 3, 4


    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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    16 Min.
  • Why Canadian Transit is Failing Families (and How to Fix It)
    Feb 13 2026

    Does having a baby mean you're officially "car-dependent"?

    In this episode of DemograFix, Cara Stern and Reece Martin, of @RMTrasit, tackle the reality of navigating Canadian cities with kids. While many parents are told that a private vehicle is the only safe or convenient way to get around, Cara and Reece explore why our transit systems often fail families – and how we can fix them.

    From the "elevator roulette" at subway stations to the hidden costs of car ownership, we’re breaking down the barriers to urban parenting.

    Have you ever been "trapped" at a subway station with a stroller or in a wheelchair? Let us know in the comments.


    Chapters:

    0:00 Introduction

    00:44 The "Car Trap": Why parents feel forced to drive

    01:38 Canadian Transit vs. the US: How do we actually rank?

    03:22 The Stroller Struggle: Accessibility "on paper" vs. reality

    08:47 A Tale of Two Cities: Toronto, Montreal, and the elevator gap

    13:11 Reece on the GoTrain accessibility car

    15:50 The Hidden Cost: Is owning a car costing you a second child?

    19:45 Policy solutions for family friendly transit

    25:02 Why free transit for kids is a game changer

    28:15 The problem with busses

    29:48 Teens and Transit: How free fares encourages a healthier lifestyle

    33:15 Making cities livable for the next generation


    Research/links:

    Studies on impact on free fares on active transportation for teens

    https://www.getonthebus.ca/resources


    Transit Use by Children and Adolescents: An Overlooked Source of and Opportunity for Physical Activity? - PMC

    https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC5502534/


    Engaging students to increase public transit ridership A guide for using city–school partnership to inspire youth to choose sustainable transportation.

    https://greenmunicipalfund.ca/sites/default/files/documents/resources/guide/guidebook-engaging-students-to-increase-public-transit-ridership-gmf.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.

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    36 Min.
  • Why Risky Bets Are Rational in a Housing Crisis
    Feb 11 2026

    Your 20s: risky bets, crypto hype, and meme stocks. 🎲 Sabrina Maddeaux and Mike Moffatt explain why being priced out of a home is turning saving into gambling — and why young men are taking the biggest swings.

    In this episode of The Missing Middle – Classonomics, we unpack why a generation priced out of housing is turning to meme stocks, crypto, and online sports betting instead of traditional saving. Mike and Sabrina explore how the “gamification” of investing on your phone blurs the line between investing and gambling, why young men dominate high-risk trading, and what research tells us about the link between gambling, crypto, and financial stress.

    The conversation introduces the idea of “financial nihilism” — when homeownership feels impossible, big bets can start to seem rational. They also debate solutions, from tighter gambling advertising rules to better financial education and, most importantly, fixing housing affordability. Is this risky behavior a cultural problem, a policy failure, or both? Watch to find out — and tell us in the comments if you’ve ever placed a big bet with your money.


    Chapters:

    00:00 Introduction

    01:10 The high-risk landscape

    02:15 Personal experience with risk

    03:00 Demographics of gamblers and investors

    04:35 Gambling vs investing

    05:30 The Risks of sports gambling & prediction markets

    06:52 The difference between zero-sum and negative-sum behaviour

    08:53 The link between gambling & crypto trading

    11:01 How the culture of gambling is hurting young men

    12:22 How the housing crisis leads to financial nihilism

    14:22 How big risks start to become rational choices

    15:38 The role of social media

    16:24 YOLO spending and the gendered aspect of risky bets

    17:50 Mike drops a hockey metaphor

    19:23 Solutions: Regulation, education and home ownership


    Research:


    Canada Is Finally Regulating Stablecoins – Here’s Why It Matters

    Cryptocurrency trading, gambling and problem gambling

    "Giving Up": The Impact of Decreasing Housing Affordability on Consumption, Work Effort, and Investment

    Newsletter Sabrina mentions:

    1 big thing: Gen Z plays the economy like a casino

    Are We Ignoring a Generation of Struggling Young Men?

    All Bets Are On: The Rise of Prediction Markets

    The Doom Spenders

    polymarket.com Website Traffic Demographics

    Gambling Statistics Canada 2026 – Unveiling Canada’s Gambling Landscape



    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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    23 Min.
  • AI is Killing Entry-Level Jobs: The 13% Drop Nobody is Talking About
    Feb 6 2026

    Yesterday, Bank of Canada governor Tiff Mackem warned that early evidence shows AI is reducing the number of entry-level jobs available.

    Are we heading toward a future of mass unemployment, or is AI just the latest "calculator" to change how we work? Cara Stern and Mike Moffatt dive deep into the data behind AI's impact on demographics and the workforce.

    While Mike leans into historical optimism, Cara brings the receipts: a recent Stanford study showing a 13% drop in employment for young workers in AI-exposed fields since the release of ChatGPT. We explore which jobs are "AI-proof," why Gen X seems to be winning (again), and what policy changes could help young people get a foot in the door.


    Chapters:

    00:00 Introduction

    00:29 Why Mike is unconcerned about AI taking his job

    01:30 Why Cara is worried about AI

    02:21 Young works AI exposed jobs see 13% drop

    03:52 Examining AI exposed occupations

    04:30 How AI impacts different cohorts of workers

    06:12 Understanding the impact of AI on wages

    06:54 Being well rounded is the best protection

    08:16 Trades, healthcare and education will continue to be in demand

    09:20 Mike shares a story from the olden times

    10:00 Mike’s take on going into the trades

    11:20 Mike on wages

    12:18 Focus on developing skills

    13:17 The role of policymakers and solutions



    Research/links:

    Canaries in the Coal Mine? Six Facts about the Recent Employment Effects of Artificial Intelligence

    Youth in Canada will need help gaining experience in the AI era

    No to being young again; The struggles of Canadian youth employment - CIBC Capital Markets

    Canada must pioneer AI adoption that creates job opportunities: Ryan Khurana in Canadian Affairs | Macdonald-Laurier Institute

    Canaries in the Coal Mine? Six Facts about the Recent Employment Effects of Artificial Intelligence

    Youth in Canada will need help gaining experience in the AI era

    No to being young again; The struggles of Canadian youth employment - CIBC Capital Markets

    Canada must pioneer AI adoption that creates job opportunities: Ryan Khurana in Canadian Affairs | Macdonald-Laurier Institute



    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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    20 Min.
  • Canada’s Starter Home Is Dead
    Feb 4 2026

    Canada’s housing ladder is broken. In this episode of Missing Middle, Sabrina Maddeaux and Mike Moffatt explain why the starter home no longer works and how an entire generation has been locked out of moving up.

    They compare buying a detached home in 2004 for $168,000 with today’s reality, where condos fail as a first step and buyers are trapped with no clear path forward. The conversation explores how this breakdown affects family formation, careers, ambition, and Canada’s economic future.=

    If homeownership feels impossible, this episode explains why and why it matters.

    Do you still believe the starter home works, or has the housing ladder completely collapsed where you live?


    Chapters:

    00:00 — What “Buying Your First Home” Used to Look Like

    00:40 — Mike’s First House: A Brand-New Detached Home… as a “Starter”

    01:47 — Why That Dream Is Gone for Today’s Buyers

    02:29 — What “Starter Home” Means Now vs. Then

    05:23 — “Aging Out” of the Starter Home

    07:03 — Trapped in a Condo

    09:58 — The “Second-Time Buyer Problem” Explained

    11:09 — Housing, Birth Rates, and Canada’s Demographic Crisis

    13:37 — Careers Limited by Real Estate, Not Talent

    18:45 — Why Politicians Are Getting This Wrong

    Research links:

    Teranet Market Insights Q1 2025

    National Bank Housing Affordability Monitor

    CMHC Housing Market Outlook 2025

    CMHC Housing Supply Report 2025

    Royal LePage House Price Survey and Market Forecast

    Statistics Canada - Homeownership and Mortgage Debt of Tax Filers

    CIBC Economics - Housing Affordability Reports



    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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    25 Min.
  • Canada’s Demographic Time Bomb: What Boom, Bust & Echo Got Right
    Jan 30 2026

    Canada’s housing crisis. Youth unemployment. Immigration debates. A broken healthcare system.

    What if we told you a book published in 1996 predicted almost all of it?

    In this episode of The Missing Middle, Cara Stern and Mike Moffatt revisit the Canadian classic Boom, Bust & Echo to explore how demographics, especially the aging of the baby boomers, reshaped Canada’s economy, housing market, job prospects, and public policy.

    We break down:

    • Why youth unemployment was a policy choice

    • How demographics quietly drive housing prices

    • What governments got right — and very wrong

    • Why immigration policy, real estate, and healthcare are deeply connected

    • And how Canada ended up with a generational economic imbalance

    This isn’t just history. It explains why life is harder for young Canadians today and what choices led us here.

    If you care about housing affordability, jobs, immigration, public policy, and Canada’s economic future, this episode is for you.

    Chapters:

    00:00 Introduction

    00:49 Why Boom, Bust, and Echo (BBE) still matters

    03:00 What the book got right and wrong

    04:25 Prediction about the rise of home health care

    06: 06 Policy dilemma: high demand for PSWs & balancing budgets

    08:12 Immigration policy advice from Boom, Bust and Echo

    09:03 Governments didn’t take the advice

    10:55 BBE real estate prediction

    11:45 Housing market predictions: what went wrong

    15:10 Boomers, Millennials & real estate

    16:40 BBE prediction on future changes to taxation policy

    17:13 The politics of moving taxation from income to capital

    19:50 Real estate prediction for aging boomers

    20:34 Naturally occurring retirement communities

    23:40 Following where people actually live

    24:47 Demographics are facts that help us understand the future

    Research/links:


    Boom, Bust & Echo: How to Profit from the Coming Demographic Shift

    https://www.amazon.ca/Boom-bust-echo-profit-demographic/dp/0921912978


    David Foot on Aging Society & Youth

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gy7y2w9i_aA


    What David Foot didn't tell us

    https://www.theglobeandmail.com/life/what-david-foot-didnt-tell-us/article784233/


    Finding Naturally Occurring Retirement Communities - Agenda segment

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ynlwpsye2c0



    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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    26 Min.
  • These Changes Can Help Make Homes Affordable for Young People
    Jan 28 2026

    In this episode of The Missing Middle, Mike Moffatt and Sabrina Maddeaux dig into why homeownership for Canadians under 40 has fallen off a cliff. Spoiler: it’s not just zoning, NIMBYs, or avocado toast. The federal government plays a much bigger role in today’s housing mess than it likes to admit.


    They break down how rapid population growth collided with a massive slowdown in building family-sized homes, why “dog-crate condos” became the default housing plan, and how taxes, development charges, and investors quietly push prices even higher. They also ask the uncomfortable question: do first-time buyer programs actually help young people — or just lock in high prices?


    From down payments that feel impossible, to policies that accidentally reward investors over families, this episode gets into what’s broken, who benefits, and what Ottawa could actually do if it wanted to bring the dream of homeownership back to life.


    If you’ve ever wondered how Canada managed to make buying a home feel impossible — this one’s for you.


    00:00 – Intro: Is the dream of homeownership dead?

    01:08 – The Federal Role: Debunking the "Provincial Responsibility" trope

    01:58 – How Federal immigration and monetary policy impact housing

    04:12 – A Blueprint to Restore Homeownership: The 4 big hurdles

    06:30 – Not All Units are Equal

    10:22 – How Population Growth Affects Supply and Demand

    12:06 – Time to Reduce Taxes on Homes

    14:05 – Making It Easier for First-Time Buyers

    16:14 – Will these Policies just Drive Prices Up?

    17:59 – The "Second-Time Buyer" crisis and downsizing seniors

    21:09 – Incentivizing Seniors to Downsize

    22:00 - Getting investors out of single-family homes: The MURB plan


    Research/Links

    A Blueprint to Restore Homeownership for Young Canadians

    https://www.missingmiddleinitiative.ca/p/a-blueprint-to-restore-homeownership


    The Quiet Death of the Investor Condo? MURBs May Change the Game

    https://www.missingmiddleinitiative.ca/p/the-quiet-death-of-the-investor-condo


    How to get single family homes out of the hands of investors

    https://www.thestar.com/opinion/contributors/this-is-how-the-government-can-get-single-family-homes-out-of-the-hands-of/article_0f92b0f4-e67e-4a84-aa62-2c9316492363.html





    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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    25 Min.