Originally Posted by ssiguy
Obviously the service sector is going to get hammered and not just due to vastly fewer tourists. People not going to the malls, concerts, sporting events, festivals, parades, hotels, restaurants, coffee shops, open houses, bars, nightclubs, public schools, libraries, universities & colleges, community centres, the gym, the movies, conventions,...………..this represents millions of workers. Now multiply it by 3 to get the number of workers who support those industries with food distribution, agriculture, cleaning personnel and supplies, alcohol, art, entertainment, taxis, public transit, technical services, music, consulting, clothing, TV & radio coverage, banking, computer services, equipment, transportation, internet, gasoline....the numbers are truly staggering.
The service sector is often ridiculed as being nothing more than a place of low wage jobs but it's impact on nearly every other sector of our consumer based economy is enormous and a plunge in the service sector would have devastating ripple effects throughout the rest of the economy. A collapse in the lowly service sector would throw millions of Canadians out of work.
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