Mike Moffatt

Canadian economist (born 1977) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Michael Patrick Moffatt (born March 14, 1977) is a Canadian economist, Founding Director of the University of Ottawa's Missing Middle Initiative, and a professor of Business, Economics, and Public Policy at Ivey Business School. He has held a number of think-tank roles, including succeeding Diana Carney as Director of Policy and Research at Canada 2020, a progressive Canadian think-tank. Between 2013 and 2015 Mike served as an economic advisor to Liberal Party of Canada leader Justin Trudeau, and in 2017 he was named Chief Innovation Fellow for the Government of Canada.

Born
Michael Patrick Moffatt

(1977-03-14) March 14, 1977 (age 49)
SpouseHannah Rasmussen
Quick facts Born, Spouse ...
Mike Moffatt
Born
Michael Patrick Moffatt

(1977-03-14) March 14, 1977 (age 49)
SpouseHannah Rasmussen
Academic background
Alma materIvey Business School
University of Rochester
University of Western Ontario
Academic work
DisciplineIndustrial organization
School or traditionNeoclassical economics
InstitutionsIvey Business School
Canada 2020
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Mike's family is from Whalen Corners in Lucan Biddulph, though Mike grew up in London, Ontario, where he attended elementary and highschool with fellow urbanist Jason Slaughter of Not Just Bikes.

Education and career

Moffatt has a combined honours B.A. in economics and political science from the University of Western Ontario and a M.A. economics degree from the University of Rochester. He graduated from the Ph.D. program for business administration at the Richard Ivey School of Business in 2012. He is an assistant professor of business, economics and public policy at Ivey. In 2018, Moffatt was appointed director of policy and research at the progressive think-tank Canada 2020.[1]

He was a "guide" for the Economics topic at About.com and provided weekly articles on economics topics, with a focus towards students.[2] Moffatt is a business and economy consultant and appeared CBC Radio and the National Post.[3] He also is an author for The Globe and Mail.

References

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