Tomorrow something like one million people will be informed about whether they have a job to go to on Monday - some will, some will not.
I said at the time that furlough was a good thing, if a bit too generous at 80%. Something like 65-70% would have allowed it to run deeper and longer, but that's history.
The thing now is that everybody has known for months that it was coming to an end. Anybody who has been on the scheme long-term and definitely for the last six months must have known that their job was in jeopardy. They could, and probably should, have taken steps to re skill or retrain. There were plenty of free resources out there to do so, and they had the time. No guarantee of a job, obviously, but they would have a broader skill set to "sell" to prospective employers.
The other thing is that there are something like 1.3 million job vacancies. Many of them are in towns and cites, where most of us live, and in industries such a retail, warehousing and hospitality, where the training needed to perform effectively is minimal. People can get to those jobs. And, yes, I do understand that they are not what people "want" to do, but in extremis and in the short term....? Let's face it £335 per week (min wage) is better than £74 JSA: it's survivable. In-work benefits will probably still be needed but the costs to the individuals, families and the country will be lessened.
It has always been the case that it is easier to get a job from having a job than being unemployed as it shows willing. Things are no different today. There are signs that the UK economy is growing and that there will be more and better paid jobs in the near future so there should be opportunities for many of these people to move up again.