Picking up from another thread ... this struck me while I was very busy on other things, coming back to comment now.
There is no such thing as a 'new normal' it's just media speak to cause fear and panic. We didn't have a 'new normal' after the 2008 recession, nor after Swine Flu. Life changes as things evolve, tha's just general life.
The wording "new normal" is indeed a convenient label for the media. Intended "to cause fear and panic" but an appreciation that there will be things in 2021 or 2023 which are different to things were in 2017 or 2019. Life does indeed "change as things evolve" and always has done, call it "general life" if you don't want to label it.
But ... I heard it said, and agree with the sentiment that, over the second quarter of this year, there were an underlying year's worth of changes each month. So whilst things changed from 2017 to 2019 in general life, the changes from 2019 to 2021 in life will be far more significant - perhaps things will have changed in 2 years as much as they have typically done in 10. And then they will revert to the same level of change in the following 2 years. So - a step change / a leap over the current year or two, with less dramatic changes expected thereafter.
My crystal ball, though, has an ill-defined time axis and things may remain very changeable through 2021; perhaps I should have looked forward to 2022 and compared it to 2024? My crystal ball has also reacted for the purposes of this look ahead to the shake caused by the coronavirus pandemic, and may not have fully factored in changes from other events - climate change, resource shortage, the struggle for equal rights and fair treatment and quality of life, contrasted to the power play of dictatorships and interests of embedded positions.
So ... looking ahead ... a
BBC» article
Nearly a third of people should still be working from homes, even when coronavirus restrictions have eased, says the Welsh Government.
[snip]
Deputy Minister for Transport and Economy, Lee Waters [said] "We believe many people will want to continue to work remotely in the longer term and this could be a step-change in the way we work in Wales."
Obvious effect on passenger numbers, long term. But also on the pattern of when (in the day and week) they travel and where (source and destination) they travel. The commute in 2022 and the business trip will still be there but a different pattern. The social fabric effects ... let's see ... why live in Pangbourne and keep a second home in Penally when you can live all the time in Penally and make a weekly trip to the office? Or why live in Reading and not Roche any longer, or Maidenhead rather than Minehead?
For pragmatic / practical purposes, the 2020 holiday was taken in Bournemouth not Bodrum if at all, and that may have been a rediscovery. In the future, a weekend trip to Barcelona replaced by a weekend trip to Blackpool and a lifetime trip to the Mauritius gives way to a trip to Mallaig, onward to Skye not the Seychelles. The Costal Del Sol replaced by the Cornish Riviera once again. Looe not Lisbon, Falmouth not Faro.
Edit (15.9.2020) to add That last sentence sparked a discussion which has been split (at member's requests) into a separate thread at
http://www.passenger.chat/24018 on returning to leisure trips and their potential new pattern