UBI, nationalisation, the 'magic money' tree, value of low paid workers, the necessity of consumption, travel, commuting, the utility of 'experts' etc
some of these may hold true. things have unexpected effects. some will be positive. I always bring up the rise in standards of living post-Black Death.
some decrease in travel and commuting as as the shift toward remote working, learning, etc accelerates, seem likely
possibly consumption as well, though whether that's more because people are consciously reducing it, or no one has any $$, remains to be seen
a higher valuation of lowly-paid workers, I seriously doubt - if anything, a greater shift toward automation as rapidly as technology allows
definitely not a decrease in a reliance on experts. this is totally a crisis of technocrats - public health officials, virologists, epidemiologists, etc.