OPINION
The sun will rise. All this utter disruption to our lives will come to an end at some time. But the hangover will linger a lot longer than the fairly sudden stop to just everything we were familiar with. Whilst economists will argue whether its a recession or depression, the world will go into a long re-awakening after the social and economic devastation caused by a tiny unseen virus.
We can be assured that life will continue but things will NOT be the same again. We will all emerge into a battered and bruised new normal.
What will things be like when this is all over? Will things snap magically back into place? No. How f##ked up will things be and how long will it take for our lives to get back to where they were, if ever?
We dont know but have been scanning the channels and come up with some general consensus
Governments are throwing cash into the local economy either as handouts or as business stimulus to prop up the businesses who suddenly have fewer, or no, customers, and the citizens who need cash simply to get through the next day. The situations will be very different around the world but all governments, some already with high debt ratios, will be less capable of stimulating their local economies than before. Remember interest rates, almost everywhere, were at historic lows and the world economic growth, even before all this disruption kicked in, was fragile at best.
China will be blamed for the pandemic. Whether people feel inclined to point the finger at Chinese officials, people eating wildlife from a wet-market in Wuhan, Chinese doctors or the entire Chinese population, there will be a powerful blame game as western governments, who largely failed to act early after months of clear and present warnings, will try and deflect blame. Their responses will also be reflected in coming elections.
China has already become introspective. After 50 years of incredible growth and integration if not domination with world trade, theyve closed their borders and looking to contain their own problems whilst showing some good faith and sharing their technology and experiences with other governments. They would be acutely aware of the finger pointing thats on the way and are on a charm offensive, even now, to soften the tsunami of vitriol.
Meanwhile, the worlds other governments will be focussing on reviving their local economies and less concerned about broader world trade issues. The need to stimulate their own back yard will become an economic necessity and there will be commensurate rises of nationalism and xenophobia to stoke the local fires and spur on national action. Some of this will get ugly.
Conspiracy theories will abound, theres already plenty of this nonsense circulating.
We are social animals. But gatherings for watching sport and entertainment, working together in offices, getting together in smaller and larger groups, are all going to be different.
Whilst many businesses have continued to function with their employees working from home, there will be some that found new efficiencies in that arrangement and will continue to work that way. With so much tech these days to support working from home video conferencing, online checks and screengrab software that allows bosses to monitor work, fast internet that brings everyone together in an instantaneous digital office some businesses will say goodbye to renting expensive offices and put the rent money into better tech, staffing and training.
Workers will wonder why they spend hours commuting to work when they could get two hours or more of their lives back EVERY DAY to do useful things like spending time with family or doing some extra work. Of course that situation isnt going to work for many businesses, but for many it will, and there will be more people working remotely in the future for sure.
Up Close and Personal, will be replaced with notions of greater personal space. More people will wear face masks, indeed theyll become a fashion accessory. Being checked for your temperature, routine (and cheap) testing for Covid-19, and greater attention to personal hygiene, will just become new habits.
Get ready for the I survived Covid-19 T-shirts. The world is going to have yet another way of pigeon-holing people. There will be those who were infected and survived Covid-19 and the plenty of others, the majority, who were able to remain uninfected.
There will be another opportunity for social stigma, the same way the the HIV patients were shunned in the 80s and 90s, as people approach those who had Covid-19 sort of differently to everyone else. In the early days, as we emerge into this brave post-coronavirus world, there will be lots of unanswered questions about the possibility of infection from those who had the virus.
It used to be fire fighters and war veterans that attracted our admiration and outbursts of applause. Added to that will be health workers after their toil and sacrifice during the peaks of this outbreak. And, wow, do they deserve it?! Long under-recognised for their skills and crazy work hours, they will now be rightfully remembered and celebrated as true community heroes for staying at the frontline, in harms way, and fighting the good fight.
The cult of the celebrity chef and celebrity DJs is hopefully over and the world will now admire the doctors, nurses, clinicians, scientists and workers who helped save thousands of lives and had to witness the loss of far too many.
There will hopefully emerge a much better appreciation for science and the value of scientific methods and the opinion of people who work with facts. Many of the problems were facing at the moment are because governments and decision-makers acted from the perspective of opinions and economic fear and not the safety and health of their populations.
Its here and and its here to stay. Like some of the other coronaviruses, it may eventually become contained to the extent that there are just smatterings of new infections from time to time. But the genie is out of the bottle and Covid-19 is now part of the rich world biology. It may even move from being pandemic to endemic, where it just gets added to the long list of possible infections that can attack humans.
A safe and reliable vaccine will eventually be developed and large segments of the world population will become immune so that new hosts for the Covid-19 virus become fewer. But the economic pain and social changes will linger on for years, perhaps decades.
Covid-25? Covid-30?
A new pandemic emerges every decade or so. Every time there is an expectation that people and governments have learned fro the mistakes made and a commitment to better readiness next time it happens (and it WILL happen again). The Covid-19 coronavirus has been particularly insidious because it was the right virus at the wrong time. 1) It was very infectious and infectious in people days before they started feeling sick or showing symptoms. 2) It was deadly enough to kill 10-20 times the number of people killed by the seasonal flu, but not so deadly that it killed off its hosts too quickly. 3) The huge increase in global air travel over the past decade made the global transmission of the virus quick and efficient. Global airline passenger growth almost doubled in the past ten years. And fares got cheaper and cheaper, all perfect recipe for a nasty virus.
Governments will be forced to take the threat of future outbreaks much more seriously and plan for outbreak teams to be able to quickly, efficiently and safely isolate neighbourhoods and communities. They will need reserves of equipment and medical resources to cope if needs be. Countries will need to plan the manufacture and stockpile of lifesaving drugs and equipment without having to depend on other countries. The US has been caught with its pants down in this crisis with most of its drugs they need now being manufactured in. you guessed it China.
Organisations like the World Health Organisation will also have to become better funded and equipped to monitor and report any of these outbreaks much quicker in the future and all governments will have to commit to open and transparent reporting, non-negotiable. They will also need to rebuild confidence with the world community.
Through no fault of their own, people are going to emerge from this mess on the better or worse side of the fence. Some businesses and workers will thrive, there will be many whose businesses are decimated from the situation, and some may return to the old normal. But it wont be the same normal as before.
With a world economy deep in some sort of recession, discretionary spending is going to be way down the list. The nice things people used to splash cash on will be low in their priorities the manicure, the holiday, the new car, the holiday house, the new clothes, the extension on the house, the sparkly jewellery, the new fangled smartphone. Businesses who trade in items of discretionary spend will do poorly in the next few years. Businesses that trade in the essentials will do better. Luxury anything will be less in demand.
The hit was high-impact and quick. The drops in world markets and business activity were swift. But the recovery is expected to take years. Yes, sorry to say, most economic pundits are talking about slow and ponderous recovery back to economic health nationwide and personal.
And the virus wont suddenly disappear. Whilst there will be slow re-openings and loosening on restrictions, it will only take a few new cases to emerge for another local lockdown again. Governments will be keen to keep the lid on new outbreaks because theyve experienced the economic pain of widespread outbreaks.
Impossible to accurately predict and much will depend on how carefully and skilfully governments let people get back to work, restart the engines and monitor any new outbreaks. Even the most optimistic western politicians are admitting a June date at earliest. Other are predicting that the rest of 2020 will just be a long, slow clawing back to normality, albeit a new normal.
One way or the other, there is still a to to learn and a long way to go before the new normal emerges. But it will.
Read the original post:
PCT were all going to be suffering from Post-Coronavirus Trauma - The Thaiger
- HGTV Star Mike Holmes Says To Do One Thing Before Replacing Kitchen Cabinets - House Digest - December 21st, 2024 [December 21st, 2024]
- Kitchen Tune-Up offers a more affordable option to create the kitchen of your dreams - Fox11online.com - November 12th, 2024 [November 12th, 2024]
- Keystone Wood Specialties offers cabinet refacing training - woodworkingnetwork.com - November 4th, 2024 [November 4th, 2024]
- Enjoy a stress-free home makeover this fall with Granite Transformations - ABC15 Arizona in Phoenix - September 7th, 2024 [September 7th, 2024]
- Kitchen Solvers Strengthens Franchise Opportunity with New Advancements & Innovation - PR Newswire - July 18th, 2024 [July 18th, 2024]
- Event Extra: Taliban Rule Takes Profound Toll on Afghan Women and Minorities - United States Institute of Peace - August 20th, 2022 [August 20th, 2022]
- Andrew Watkins on the One-Year Anniversary of Taliban Takeover - United States Institute of Peace - August 20th, 2022 [August 20th, 2022]
- Refacing the Cabinets Can Enhance the Most Important Areas of the Home - Digital Journal - July 26th, 2022 [July 26th, 2022]
- 'Stopping Putin in Ukraine Will Send a Message to Xi Jinping' - The Dispatch - July 26th, 2022 [July 26th, 2022]
- Kitchen Magic Defines the Hybrid Kitchen - PR Newswire - July 8th, 2022 [July 8th, 2022]
- Heatwave myths busted as July reaches scorching temperatures - The Mirror - July 8th, 2022 [July 8th, 2022]
- N-Hance Canada Grows in Six Provinces and Aims to Introduce 20 Territories, with Expansion Plans in Western Canada - Business Wire - July 8th, 2022 [July 8th, 2022]
- Budget measures on cost of living will have 'immediate impact', says Taoiseach - The Irish Times - July 8th, 2022 [July 8th, 2022]
- The Tragedy of Martha is That Her Story Had Been Hijacked So Thoroughly by the White Men Around Her: Anne Alvergue and Debra McClutchy on The Martha... - May 2nd, 2022 [May 2nd, 2022]
- Boris Johnson is no Churchill and can resign during a war, say baffled historians and diplomats - iNews - April 19th, 2022 [April 19th, 2022]
- Lebanon risks missing IMF preconditions for EFF owing to weak governance: S&P - Arab News - April 19th, 2022 [April 19th, 2022]
- How Sri Lanka's unprecedented crisis is unfolding on the ground - The Indian Express - April 19th, 2022 [April 19th, 2022]
- Liability, long-term care, housing discussed at ROMA conference - County Weekly News - January 25th, 2022 [January 25th, 2022]
- Have your say and help transform the health of city residents - Liverpool Express - January 25th, 2022 [January 25th, 2022]
- Will Boris Johnson be ousted as UK Prime Minister soon? The Poll Bludger - The Poll Bludger - January 25th, 2022 [January 25th, 2022]
- Explained: Why the timing of Omicron's arrival matters - Newstalk ZB - January 25th, 2022 [January 25th, 2022]
- Kitchen Cabinet Refacing | Kitchen Tune-Up - December 28th, 2021 [December 28th, 2021]
- Affordable Cabinet Refacing Half Cost of Replacing Cabinets - December 28th, 2021 [December 28th, 2021]
- Why location intelligence is the science of where - Business Post - December 28th, 2021 [December 28th, 2021]
- Restoring your cabinets without the cost of replacement - KTAR.com - November 4th, 2021 [November 4th, 2021]
- University of Iowa considers three models to change approach to campus safety - UI The Daily Iowan - February 17th, 2021 [February 17th, 2021]
- 3 winter storms in 7 days: Beshear says to stay home as more snow, ice arrives - WHAS11.com - February 17th, 2021 [February 17th, 2021]
- Government wary of rushing reopening schools as reports kids would make phased return to classrooms from - The Irish Sun - February 17th, 2021 [February 17th, 2021]
- Beshear urges caution with multiple winter storms reaching Kentucky - Appalachian News-Express - February 17th, 2021 [February 17th, 2021]
- Gov. Beshear urges caution with multiple storms reaching Kentucky - ABC 36 News - WTVQ - February 17th, 2021 [February 17th, 2021]
- Finance Minister Serhiy Marchenko: Our main scenario is cooperation with the IMF - UNIAN-Economy - February 17th, 2021 [February 17th, 2021]
- Changes expected to local fees for cannabis sector early next month - Antigua Observer - February 17th, 2021 [February 17th, 2021]
- Cabinet Refacing vs Painting | Which Should You Choose? - February 9th, 2021 [February 9th, 2021]
- On-The-Air (05/02/2021) - Creamer Media's Mining Weekly - February 9th, 2021 [February 9th, 2021]
- How to get the COVID-19 vaccine if you're facing trouble - Yahoo News - January 3rd, 2021 [January 3rd, 2021]
- The race to replace Bill de Blasio: Who will be New York City's next mayor? - The Guardian - January 3rd, 2021 [January 3rd, 2021]
- Remembering the lives lost to COVID-19 in 2020 - Yahoo News - January 3rd, 2021 [January 3rd, 2021]
- Stephen Donnelly says kissing lots of people on New Years Eve is not allowed - Extra.ie - January 3rd, 2021 [January 3rd, 2021]
- Research Report and Overview on Kitchen Cabinet Services Market, 2020-2025 - The Monitor - January 3rd, 2021 [January 3rd, 2021]
- HSE's worst concerns over COVID-19 have been realised, chief says - Newstalk - January 3rd, 2021 [January 3rd, 2021]
- Ottawans share their best moments of 2020 - Yahoo News Canada - January 3rd, 2021 [January 3rd, 2021]
- FORECAST: Warmer temps ahead of the weekend - Yahoo News - December 19th, 2020 [December 19th, 2020]
- Rolex With Spinach, Bacon, Tomato and Avocado - Yahoo News - December 19th, 2020 [December 19th, 2020]
- Davidson and Shaw prepare for a second term in Govt - Newsroom - December 19th, 2020 [December 19th, 2020]
- Wake-Up Weather: Clouds and sun - Yahoo News - December 18th, 2020 [December 18th, 2020]
- Will the Biden administration really look like America? - Politico - December 11th, 2020 [December 11th, 2020]
- Highway 17, Huron Central Railway discussed as part of northern transportation plan - SooToday - December 11th, 2020 [December 11th, 2020]
- Not Everybody Can be a Cheerleader - Splice Today - December 11th, 2020 [December 11th, 2020]
- Mother killed in crash one month after 12-year-old son gunned down - Yahoo News - December 11th, 2020 [December 11th, 2020]
- What to do with the 4th pick in a fantasy basketball draft - Yahoo! Voices - December 11th, 2020 [December 11th, 2020]
- How New Jersey Homeowners Can Boost The Value Of Their Home - Patch.com - November 5th, 2020 [November 5th, 2020]
- Vermont can show America how to heal its divisions - Bennington Banner - November 5th, 2020 [November 5th, 2020]
- HR McMaster weighs in on North Korea, Russia - WSGW - November 5th, 2020 [November 5th, 2020]
- Election 2020 updates: Trump ends long day rushing through final rally in Minnesota - ABC News - November 5th, 2020 [November 5th, 2020]
- Mixed emotions over national lockdown as local businesses offer help - Lynn News - November 5th, 2020 [November 5th, 2020]
- East Baton Rouge Schools have another interim superintendent. How will they pick the next leader? - The Advocate - October 23rd, 2020 [October 23rd, 2020]
- 13 of the best rated horror films you can stream in the UK: Amazon Prime, Netflix, Now TV and more - Yorkshire Evening Post - October 13th, 2020 [October 13th, 2020]
- Kitchen Tune-Up Franchise System Embodies Theme of One Tuniverse at Annual National Reunion - Franchising.com - October 10th, 2020 [October 10th, 2020]
- Trump's obstruction of the 2020 census, explained Center for Public Integrity - Center for Public Integrity - October 10th, 2020 [October 10th, 2020]
- Pubs and restaurants in North of England face '11th hour' with talk of second lockdown closures - iNews - October 10th, 2020 [October 10th, 2020]
- Biden's Climate Plan Isn't the Green New Deal - Earth Island Journal - October 10th, 2020 [October 10th, 2020]
- Long-Time Republican The Rock Endorses Biden-Harris Campaign, Trump Says Hell Await Word From The Paper and The Scissors (Half of Which Beat Rock) -... - October 10th, 2020 [October 10th, 2020]
- Avon Library To Host Final Two Programs For Deeds Not Words: 100 Years Of The Vote For Women - Patch.com - September 20th, 2020 [September 20th, 2020]
- Climate Cabinet Action Fund Announces The Climate Cabinet 40 - PR Web - September 20th, 2020 [September 20th, 2020]
- Safe Drive-Thru Flu Clinics Scheduled For The Town Of Avon - Patch.com - September 20th, 2020 [September 20th, 2020]
- Japan's next leader: How Yoshihide Suga beat the odds to succeed Shinzo Abe - The Japan Times - September 20th, 2020 [September 20th, 2020]
- Trump 'leads' like he's still selling over-priced condos. And his happy talk is killing us. - USA TODAY - September 20th, 2020 [September 20th, 2020]
- Travel and coronavirus border closures on the agenda at National Cabinet after Qantas chief Alan Joyce's criticism - ABC News - August 21st, 2020 [August 21st, 2020]
- Q-and-A: Barbara Buckley on progress of Nevada 'strike force' tackling backlogged jobless claims - Northern Nevada Business Weekly - August 21st, 2020 [August 21st, 2020]
- Indy Q&A: Barbara Buckley on progress of new 'strike force' trying to tackle backlogged unemployment claims - The Nevada Independent - August 21st, 2020 [August 21st, 2020]
- Joe Biden secures Democratic presidential nomination during night of attacks on Trump and messages of unity - USA TODAY - August 21st, 2020 [August 21st, 2020]
- Clover Moore says it 'may not be responsible' to hold New Year's Eve fireworks - Sydney Morning Herald - August 21st, 2020 [August 21st, 2020]
- International destinations reopening to tourists this summer - WTTV CBS4Indy - July 5th, 2020 [July 5th, 2020]
- Which international destinations are reopening to tourists? - KEYT - June 18th, 2020 [June 18th, 2020]
- School just one day a week after the summer? Joe McHugh has got to be kidding - The Irish Times - June 18th, 2020 [June 18th, 2020]
- Rosie on the House: Check out choices for outdated cabinets - Green Valley News - June 6th, 2020 [June 6th, 2020]
- Robert Reich's advice to the Class of 2020 - Salon - June 6th, 2020 [June 6th, 2020]
- Which international destinations are reopening to tourists? - CNN - June 6th, 2020 [June 6th, 2020]
- A Perfect Storm: Democracy on the Defensive in Trump's America - DER SPIEGEL - June 6th, 2020 [June 6th, 2020]
- Pubs and restaurants to 'hopefully' reopen in July, Cabinet minister says - Daily Star - May 19th, 2020 [May 19th, 2020]