Rush to grocery stores slowing
COMMUTING to work has dropped by a third in Australia, the use of public transport has more than halved and, despite concerns about panic-buying, visits to the grocery store and pharmacy are down by almost 20 per cent since last month.
Statistics also show two Australian states are taking social distancing rules more seriously than the rest: Victoria and Tasmania.
Internet giant Google delivered the verdict on Australians’ movements during the coronavirus pandemic in one of 131 national Community Mobile Reports released on Friday.
The company used anonymous location data taken from smartphones to compile the reports, comparing users’ movements on February 16 to their trips taken on March 29.
Google’s Australian research showed visits to retail, dining and entertainment venues, many of which have now been ordered to close, fell by 45 per cent during the month.
Visits to parks and beaches also fell 35 per cent, the report found, and Australians took 33 per cent fewer trips to work, with a particularly steep drop off after March 22.
Public transport recorded the greatest decline in travel movements, down 58 per cent, but even grocery stores and pharmacies recorded 19 per cent fewer visits during the time period.
Victorians and Tasmanians were making the biggest changes to their daily lives to fight COVID-19, according to the report, with movements consistently lower than the national average.
Despite Melbournites’ famed love of coffee, Victorian travel to cafes and other food and entertainment venues dropped by 51 per cent, work commutes fell by 37 per cent in the state, and public transport use fell by 68 per cent — 10 per cent below the national figure.
Tasmanians also made massive cutbacks, with 70 per cent fewer visits to parks, beaches and gardens, and 30 per cent less travel to supermarkets.