
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


This week on The Missing Middle Podcast, Mike Moffatt and Sabrina Maddeaux bust some myths and take a hard look at Canada’s place in the global housing landscape. Drawing on new OECD data, they reveal why Canada’s housing affordability crisis is among the worst in the developed world—with home prices having risen more than twice as fast as incomes since 1999. They compare Canada’s record to other OECD countries (spoiler: it’s not flattering) and highlight where affordability has been successfully maintained (hint: not here). Sabrina offers a theory on why both Canada and Australia are failing so badly at keeping homes affordable, and together, she and Mike make the case for dropping the excuse that this is just a “global trend.”
Chapters:
00:00 Introduction
01:30 Game:React to the Boomer Comment
02:40 Young people don’t want responsibility?
03:59 Global trend or Canadian crisis?
05:12 Missing Middle study on the global housing landscape
07:35 Home prices vs incomes
09:33 It’s worse in Canada, it’s us, we’re the problem
12:30 Which countries are better at affordability?
15:00 Possible reasons Canada and Australia are struggling with affordability?
Housing report card:
https://jhelmer.quarto.pub/rescon-state-of-the-sector-quarterly-reports/12-report-card-brantford.html
Derek Thompson Sunstack - Chart 10
https://www.derekthompson.org/p/the-25-most-interesting-ideas-ive?utm_source=www.profgmarkets.com&utm_medium=newsletter&utm_campaign=nvidia-to-invest-5-billion-in-intel
Canada vs. the World: The Worst Record on Housing Affordability Since 2004
https://www.missingmiddleinitiative.ca/p/canada-vs-the-world-the-worst-record
OECD Affordable Housing Database:
https://www.oecd.org/en/data/datasets/oecd-affordable-housing-database.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.
By Cara Stern, Mike Moffatt, and Meredith Martin3.7
33 ratings
This week on The Missing Middle Podcast, Mike Moffatt and Sabrina Maddeaux bust some myths and take a hard look at Canada’s place in the global housing landscape. Drawing on new OECD data, they reveal why Canada’s housing affordability crisis is among the worst in the developed world—with home prices having risen more than twice as fast as incomes since 1999. They compare Canada’s record to other OECD countries (spoiler: it’s not flattering) and highlight where affordability has been successfully maintained (hint: not here). Sabrina offers a theory on why both Canada and Australia are failing so badly at keeping homes affordable, and together, she and Mike make the case for dropping the excuse that this is just a “global trend.”
Chapters:
00:00 Introduction
01:30 Game:React to the Boomer Comment
02:40 Young people don’t want responsibility?
03:59 Global trend or Canadian crisis?
05:12 Missing Middle study on the global housing landscape
07:35 Home prices vs incomes
09:33 It’s worse in Canada, it’s us, we’re the problem
12:30 Which countries are better at affordability?
15:00 Possible reasons Canada and Australia are struggling with affordability?
Housing report card:
https://jhelmer.quarto.pub/rescon-state-of-the-sector-quarterly-reports/12-report-card-brantford.html
Derek Thompson Sunstack - Chart 10
https://www.derekthompson.org/p/the-25-most-interesting-ideas-ive?utm_source=www.profgmarkets.com&utm_medium=newsletter&utm_campaign=nvidia-to-invest-5-billion-in-intel
Canada vs. the World: The Worst Record on Housing Affordability Since 2004
https://www.missingmiddleinitiative.ca/p/canada-vs-the-world-the-worst-record
OECD Affordable Housing Database:
https://www.oecd.org/en/data/datasets/oecd-affordable-housing-database.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.

28 Listeners

11 Listeners

50 Listeners

27 Listeners

228 Listeners

22 Listeners

76 Listeners

111 Listeners

44 Listeners

20 Listeners

3 Listeners

34 Listeners

12 Listeners

33 Listeners

14 Listeners