Typical polar opposite.
Many people will be able to return to work. Some will work from home, some will have the anti-bodies from infection they knew or did not know they had, others may be in low exposure areas. Who wants to throw reasonableness and caution to the wind and volunteer to go back to how things were, lets say, during the period of thanksgiving through the holidays up to about the superbowl? We simply can't pack stadiums, race tracks, fairgrounds, shopping malls, etc. by , lets say Easter. Any volunteers? Even rather mundane activities of going to family gatherings, your doctor or dentist appointments, take in a movie, or go to a casino may cost one their lives. Or, if enough venture out and the virus takes off again (and mutates). Once the huge amount of active infections get throttled back can society dabble with a new normality. Some people lay pretty much low to begin with. Think of the elderly in the rest homes and the visitor or employee of the place that brings the illness in. I bet there is more screening of workers in the future. Could a contractor or steel building, bridge, water or wastewater construction project proceed if infection spread within the ranks of the workers, factory, assembly line work, stock market floor?
I believe the 1918 pandemic ran 3 years and killed 50m in the world 657k in the US, at that time the population of the US was 103m now its 331m. One can do the math. It's time to get back to work, likely in a new way.