| i start + now it's your turn :) - More births between December and March. - More money for tools and service providers who benefit from WFH. This can already be seen in the Zoom share price. But Microsoft, Slack and many others should also benefit. - Funding for Edu-Tech and remote-work start-ups. - Increased household debt in the western world. - US oil producers go bust. - US dollar crashes. The question is against what? The yuan? - Local and long-distance transport is becoming less attractive. - As we wash our hands more often and use more disinfectants, more hand creams are sold. - Many households that depend on working at events in the catering trade or in hotels will not be able to pay off their home loans. - More isolation. Hence more depression. Hence more suicides. - More remote learning. Legislative changes that enable / strengthen remote universities. - Home fitness equipment is spreading. - More racism towards Asians in the western world. - More consumption of Netflix, Youtube and video games. - More food and home delivery. - Less visits to restaurants. - Spread of telemedicine. - Less low-budget prostitution. - More consumption of online pornography. - Less gym memberships. - Lower voter turnout in almost all countries. - Less visits to night clubs and discos. |
- Significantly less tourism in 2020. Maybe a peak in 2021.
- More divorces.
- Higher unemployment rate.
- Less globalization. There are other triggers for this, such as the current (and expected) US foreign policy.
- A shift in the age pyramid, with various consequences!
- Greater spread / acceptance of bidets. Spread of systems that retrofit a kind of bidet for western toilets.
- Faster changes to the law for drone deliveries.
- More privately owned firearms.
- More doomsday prepper.
- bank consolidation. Especially in the United States.
- I'm curious to see what happens to all of the sub-prime car loans in the United States that used to blow cars up to very poor Uber drivers. They drive for +/- 0 Uber and then drive to the 2nd and 3rd job. One of the jobs breaks away.
- Higher mortality rates for various diseases because hospitals and health systems are overloaded.
- More vegeterians and pasters.
- High capacity utilization in cemeteries, undertakers and crematoriums.
- Much, much more blatant two-tier medicine than before.
- Various airport businesses go bankrupt.
- Less just-in-time, but more local stocks / buffers. In all stations of the supply chain.
- Blatant price changes in food. The prices for mussels, eels and lobsters have dropped by up to 70% in some markets!
- A lot of assets will migrate from older generations to younger generations.
- More vertical farming, rooftop farming, rooftop bee keeping, etc. in cities.