Answer: intresting answer
At a macro level it would generally be a non-event.
Why? Because of the replacement factor. If 90% of what I “did not buy today” was bought before today or after today, then the impact is very marginal.
Example - Many Christian countries shut down all commerce during the high holidays like Christmas etc. No commerce is done for several days. Does the lack of commerce on those days impact their economy - no. Because they buy in advance. In fact they more then they normally would.
This behaviour was also seen in times of rationing. People would buy more in anticipation of not being able to buy in the future.
At it’s greatest impact - if what I/we did not buy today, is never replaced - then the maximum impact is 1/356th of something, but not everything. Not everything is stopped/closed/shut-down.
Example - All the electricity that was not used by the stores being closed, does not affect the operation of the hydro-electric dam, that still generates electricity despite demand being lower for a day. The excess electricity generated is then wasted.
Explanation:
yup probally that well happen