“The 2020 covid lockdowns revealed that blanket disruptions carry unsustainable costs; future strategies must prioritize sector-specific continuity—especially for education and healthcare—to mitigate long-term societal damage’.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s recent appeal for fuel conservation and reduced reliance on imports—issued against the backdrop of the West Asia crisis—has reignited long-standing national anxieties. His call to revisit certain practices seen during the COVID-19-such as work from home, online meetings, and reduced travel-has led some to speculate whether India could once again move toward lockdown-like restrictions. However, such fears appear misplaced. The message from the government is one of caution and collective responsibility, not coercion or shutdown. Yet, even the mention of COVID-era measures is enough to reopen old debates-and rightly so. The lockdown of 2020 was an extraordinary response to an unprecedented health crisis. But it also came with deep social and economic consequences, many of which are still being felt. If there is one clear lesson from that period, it is this: any future crisis management must avoid blanket disruptions, especially in critical sectors like education and healthcare. Education, in particular, paid a heavy price during the pandemic. Prolonged school closures created learning gaps that disproportionately affected students from disadvantaged backgrounds. While online classes became the norm, access to devices and stable internet remained uneven. The result was not just academic disruption, but also a widening of inequality. If any form of restrictions is ever considered again, the education sector must be shielded. Schools and colleges are not merely institutions of learning-they are pillars of social development, and their closure should be the last resort, not the first response. Equally important is the healthcare sector, which must remain fully operational under all circumstances. The pandemic demonstrated both the resilience and the vulnerabilities of India’s health system. Hospitals, clinics, and frontline workers carried the burden of the crisis, often under immense pressure. Any disruption to healthcare services would not only undermine crisis response but also endanger lives beyond the immediate emergency. Ensuring uninterrupted access to medical care must remain non-negotiable. Another uncomfortable truth from the COVID period was the conduct of sections of the private education sector. Many private schools continued to charge full fees despite operating online or offering limited services. Parents, already grappling with financial uncertainty, found themselves under additional strain.
“Institutional growth post 2020 pandemic lockdown has shifted the focus from reactive lockdowns to targeted stability. By balancing crisis management with the continuity of essential services, the goal is to build a resilient infrastructure that protects citizens and vital sectors without the need for sweeping disruptions.”
At the same time, non-teaching staff-drivers, helpers, and support workers-faced salary cuts or job losses. These were the invisible casualties of the lockdown, individuals with little financial security and even less bargaining power. Such practices exposed a troubling imbalance. Educational institutions, which are expected to uphold social responsibility, appeared in some cases to prioritize revenue over fairness. This cannot be allowed to repeat. Any future contingency must include safeguards to ensure that students are not exploited and that employees, particularly those at the lower end of the pay scale, are treated with dignity and fairness. Regulation, oversight, and accountability will be key. The Prime Minister’s current appeal is rooted in economic prudence. With global supply chains under strain and import costs rising, reducing fuel consumption and limiting non-essential imports are sensible steps. Encouraging public transport, carpooling, and energy efficiency reflects a strategy of resilience, not restriction. Even the suggestion to revive remote work and digital practices is about reducing pressure on resources, not restricting freedoms. India today is better prepared than it was in 2020. The experience of COVID-19 has strengthened institutional capacity and sharpened policy thinking. There is greater awareness of the need to balance crisis response with continuity in essential services. A nationwide lockdown, with its sweeping disruptions, is neither desirable nor likely under the current circumstances. The path forward lies in learning from the past, not repeating it. Caution is necessary, but so is clarity. Any response to emerging challenges must protect the most vital sectors, uphold fairness, and avoid placing undue burdens on ordinary citizens. The goal should be resilience without disruption-a lesson hard learned, and one that must not be forgotten.


