this post was submitted on 25 Oct 2024
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So, I don't know what the situation is in London.
But COVID-19 really clobbered a lot of commercial establishments, and particularly eateries. I'm guessing that at least some traffic might be a return of the public to restaurants, with the supply of restaurant capacity at a low due to having gone through hard times over the past our years or so.
kagis
Ah, right. This is Europe, and while the US got hit by higher energy costs too, the Ukraine invasion really dicked up energy prices in Europe for a while. And then you have the hangover from the COVID-19-related spending happening, as inflation bites, and reducing spending on restaurants is an easy thing to cut on one's budget. And this points out that restaurants are a labor-intensive industry, and Brexit has driven labor costs up by cutting the labor pool.
https://www.ft.com/content/a36ad5fd-db20-4ba8-89ea-e185838c8aa0
So the combination of all those things would tend to have squeezed the supply of restaurants, and it might be that if there's enough demand to consistently fill restaurants in London, expand existing or open new ones, that things will tend to return to a more-normal state.
Nah that city is just an overcrowded poorly designed shithole.
“poorly designed” is perhaps the weirdest complaint I’ve ever heard about London - those pesky Romans should’ve had a better vision for the city rather than the jumbled mess we have 2,000 years later.
Y ah. Here's a fresh one, how about we demolish what the actual honest-to-god Romans built and uhm you know, build a real world-class city? Like New York? L.A? Amsterdam? Stockholm? Berlin? Vienna, my love? Warsaw? Moscow?