a far greater impact than is commonly acknowledged.
Other aspects of the pandemic will also make huge changes. I've been likening this to WWII. Stay with me here. Pretend it's spring, 1939, you and I are good friends and we are planning a trip to Europe next year. We've been planning for several years, working extra jobs, saving money, and are just now beginning to make the final plans. We can hardly wait! Then September rolls around, and war breaks out. Oh, crap. We won't be going to Europe next year, but we're optimistic that this war won't last long and we'll get there in 1941. But the war does last. And last. It doesn't finally end until 1945. The soonest we might possibly take that long-postponed trip is 1946, more likely a year or two later. And the Europe we finally visit is vastly different from the one we might have seen in 1939.
It's going to be somewhat like that with Covid. Things will change more, and will change in ways we cannot predict. Some stuff is already out there, such as working from home. Schooling is also changing, although that's going to take a lot longer to figure out and get settled.
With Covid, we're in the equivalent of early 1942, and have a lot longer to go than we think.