The potential stickiness of pandemic-induced behavior changes in the United States
Deborah Salon, Matthew Wigginton Conway, Denise Capasso da Silva,, Rishabh Singh Chauhan, Sybil Derrible, Kouros Mohammadian, Sara Khoeini,, Nathan Parker, Laura Mirtich, Ali Shamshiripour, Ehsan Rahimi, and Ram, Pendyala

TL;DR
This study investigates the potential long-term behavioral changes in the U.S. post-pandemic, focusing on preferences in work, travel, shopping, and lifestyle, based on survey data collected during the pandemic.
Contribution
Provides empirical evidence on expected persistent behavioral changes in the U.S. after COVID-19 using nationally-representative survey data.
Findings
Doubling of telecommuting expected
Reduced air travel anticipated
Some individuals expect improved quality of life
Abstract
Human behavior is notoriously difficult to change, but a disruption of the magnitude of the COVID-19 pandemic has the potential to bring about long-term behavioral changes. During the pandemic, people have been forced to experience new ways of interacting, working, learning, shopping, traveling, and eating meals. A critical question going forward is how these experiences have actually changed preferences and habits in ways that might persist after the pandemic ends. Many observers have suggested theories about what the future will bring, but concrete evidence has been lacking. We present evidence on how much U.S. adults expect their own post-pandemic choices to differ from their pre-pandemic lifestyles in the areas of telecommuting, restaurant patronage, air travel, online shopping, transit use, car commuting, uptake of walking and biking, and home location. The analysis is based on a…
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