I know that it seems like Covid has been around FOR-E-VER and now that it's over, everything should be back to 'normal'. Except 1) Covid restrictions only just ended...for my state, it's only been 90 days. 2) There has been a huge amount of damage done to the 'supply chain' and it's going to take time...I figure as long as two years...before things come back to anything approaching 'normal', but it won't be the same.
As an example,
@Catscankim mentioned that her store was out of milk and half & half...how is that possible? It's like this...I have a 1000 head of dairy cows and better than half of my milk goes to supply milk to schools and restaurants and the rest goes to grocery stores and producers of dairy products. Covid comes along and shuts down schools and restaurants. Now all of a sudden I have milk that no one wants to buy...or rather no one can buy because the factories that produce the 8 oz cartons of milk for schools or those 12 gallon bags of milk for restaurants...it's not like they can just retool and start making gallon and quart containers because no one is going to want to buy a ton of cartons or can utilize those bags. So I end up dumping half of my milk. And of course, this brings up another problem...I have a 1000 dairy cows. They need to eat, they need to poop and they need to be milked. Only how am I supposed to keep feeding them, keep cleaning up their poop and keep milking them when I can longer afford to since I just lost over half of my income? I can't. So I am forced to start selling off my herd. And since I'm not the only one, I'm not getting a lot of money for them.
So here we are...the schools are recently reopened, restaurants have reopened and everyone wants milk except...I only have 500 cows now. And you can demand all you want, but my cows only give xx amount of milk per day. And it's not like I can just go out and buy a bunch of new cows...there aren't any because 1) they don't grow on trees and 2) they aren't cheap because there are thousands of other dairies across the country also needing cows. Maybe if I take out a third mortgage, I can pick up a cow or two or maybe I can get a few heifers...and then raise them to adult, and then breed them, and then wait until after the calf is born. But it's going to be a couple of years before I have a 1000 dairy cows again. And that's if my farm survived...a lot of them didn't.
Folks think that the employee shortage is do to 'low wages", but even as employers offer more money, there are still no takers. I believe that it is because discovered what my ex-husband and I did when we had our second child...that by the time we subtracted costs of transportation, clothing, food, daycare and tax liability from my wages, and added in the costs of me staying home...there really wasn't that much left over, and someone else was raising our children 9 to 10 hours a day. So I quit, and I did what women (and men) have always done over the centuries...I started "working" from home. I started a small sewing business, I told Tupperware a couple of nights a week and I did daycare (just six kids and I kept my rates low). I ended up making more money than I did working outside the home, the kids got a parent at home, everyone ate healthier and I wasn't exhausted at night.
I drove past our local "farmer's market" on Saturday...it was packed. I haven't seen so many vendors since I was in high school doing Flea Markets with my grandparents. Unfortunately I didn't have time to stop, but from what I could see...there were lots of 'home crafts'.