Post-lockdown: Which sectors will bounce back, which will take time: Experts weigh in
Team Udayavani, Apr 10, 2020, 4:44 PM IST
image for representation
Bengaluru: Sectors that depend on people’s behaviour would take the longest time to recover after the end of the lockdown period, while those curbed by the government to contain the spread of coronavirus are set for a bounce-back immediately after the restrictions are removed, say experts.
Pharma, medical and health equipment and digital companies are among those which have seen a jump in their business following the COVID-19 pandemic, they said.
Former Telecom and IT Secretary, R Chandrashekhar says the companies connected with digital world and providing services which enable digital – entertainment, work and office system, among others, and logistics supply chain would do well.
“I think to some extent, there is pent-up demand for essentials, and that will also bounce back,” he said.
An industry official said sectors like transportation, storage, warehousing would come back quickly once the lock- down is lifted, and those which would not bounce back anytime soon, are those which depend on people’s behaviour like travel, staying in hotels, flying overseas and going to shopping malls, for example.
Post-lockdown, a senior executive in a corporate firm said, e-commerce and home delivery, both by normal retail and by e-commerce companies, would see further uptick.
“Hotel and travel, for example, will take time to come back,” the executive said. “People will not like to travel unnecessarily, they will not like to stay in hotels, who knows who stayed there earlier. Tourism will take long, long time to come back.Those activities will come down dramatically.”
Chandrashekhar, also former Telecom Commission Chairman and ex-President, NASSCOM, told ‘PTI’: “People don’t want to take risks. Those which are affected due to human behaviour will take the longest time to recover, those which are curbed by the government order alone will immediately bounce back (once lockdown is lifted).”
ASSOCHAM Secretary General Deepak Sood said the country’s entire health and medical infrastructure should be massively ramped up, adding, the entire value chain would need much larger commitment and resources.
“Likewise, the pharmaceutical industry which has established its presence all across the world would need to fill in the gaps of API (Active Pharmaceutical Ingredients) towards achieving self-sufficiency in the medium term,” Sood said.
Udayavani is now on Telegram. Click here to join our channel and stay updated with the latest news.
Top News
Related Articles More
MSEZ partners with Italy’s MIR Group for Rs 1,500 cr green facility
Sony India bags ACC media rights for eight years
Musk says X now top news app on App Store in India
Air India to offer integrated aircraft maintenance engineering programme
Markets stage sharp recovery; Sensex reclaims 79k level, Nifty surges 557.35 points
MUST WATCH
Latest Additions
COP29: Civil society protests climate finance proposal, calls for ‘no deal’ over ‘bad deal’
Bengaluru: Woman accused dies by suicide, alleges harassment by investigating officer
Counting of votes underway for bypolls to three Assembly segments in Karnataka
MVA collects letters of support from over 160 candidates to form govt in Maharashtra
Mangaluru woman files complaint against husband for instant Talaq and harassment
Thanks for visiting Udayavani
You seem to have an Ad Blocker on.
To continue reading, please turn it off or whitelist Udayavani.