by TheOstrich » 22 Apr 2020, 18:03
Short term, I think we will begin to see a lot of small businesses restart trading before too long, lockdown or not. I suspect it may not be so much the Government releasing us from the lockdown, more a case of the Government accepting it's taking place anyway behind their backs and bowing to the inevitable! People need to work to survive and that will be the driving factor. An example locally is that motor repair shops have reopened, initially for key workers, now for all-comers with key workers just getting priority.
I think social distancing may become the new norm, at least for a year or so, which isn't going to be good news for many pubs, clubs, theatres, restaurants, so on. I know of at least two such businesses locally which have now closed for good (one pub, one wine bar). It will be very interesting to see how the pub / café culture reshapes or reinvents itself.
The virus will almost certainly have hastened the final demise of the High Street, the use of hard cash, and the commute to office regime. There will be much more reliance on electronic forms of communication and finance.
We have already seen one great change in transport - railways have effectively been re-nationalized! The franchise system was looking like a dead duck anyway; the Government has had no alternative but to pull the plug on it even before the Williams Review publication. I believe air travel will be drastically cut back and it will be interesting to see if the package holiday and the leisure cruise industry survives all this. I have no problem with the likes of Virgin Atlantic going to the wall.
I hope we will finish up living a more simple lifestyle - of course that's easy for me to envisage being an oldie living in a rural area - but I do wonder what will happen in our towns and cities. Will we see a breakdown of social order?
Still, there's one thing that will always remain an absolute certainty, virus or not. There'll always be repeats of Midsomer Murders and Poirot on the Drama Channel …..