The viral pandemic-and-recession is kinda an apt end to a decade defined by best/worst of virality as a dynamic. The 10s were the decade of the virus. Good and bad, mind and body.
I’m guessing about 20% of the most precarious will be hit hard (loss of income in small biz supply work in China and service work in the west).
80% will get enforced reflection and refactor time, as demand slump, quarantine/social distancing gives us some slack to fill.
I am guessing short sharp recession of about a year. This seems relatively predictable via supply shock and service-work demand slump due to social distancing. I guess prepper inventory sectors will see a slight uptick to extent they aren’t also vulnerable to the supply shock.
It’s a big natural experiment that will teach us about:
1. Fragility of lean, single-source supply chains
2. Precarious incomes
3. Fragility of service economies
4. Climate response to economic fundamentals shock
5. Effect of healthcare institutional decay
6. Remote/virtual work
I’m very curious about how workplaces will function during this period. Private life will obviously just be a bit more domestic cozy for a while (a few months to weeks now and in fall). More TV and reading and at-home cooking. But workplaces...hmmm... hard to call.
Forgot big one:
7. Public social life impact around big social gatherings
a) Olympics
b) US election rallies
c) concerts, conferences etc
d) Third-place work (Starbucks)
...
Hmm. What “canary” portfolio would be interesting to watch as indicator of how things are going?
Example: $ZM is up. Baltic dry index is down. Need like a dozen more indicators to track all 7 obvious expected impacts. These are known unknown things.