The UK's independent tax and spending watchdog has warned the coronavirus pandemic could see the economy shrink by a record 35% by June.
The Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) said that this was based on an assumption that the current lockdown would last for three months.
Once restrictions are lifted, the OBR expects no lasting damage to growth.
Separately, the International Monetary Fund warned the virus would push the UK into its deepest slump for a century.
The OBR said a three-month lockdown followed by three months of partial restrictions would trigger an economic decline of 35.1% in the quarter to June alone, following growth of 0.2% in the first three months of this year.
While the UK economy would contract by 12.8% this year under this scenario, it is expected to get back to its pre-crisis growth trend by the end of 2020.
The OBR stressed the actual outturn for growth would depend on how long the lockdown lasted as well as how quickly activity bounced back once restrictions were relaxed.
In any case, it expects half of any sharp drop in growth in the second quarter to be reversed in the three months to September as the economy starts to recover.
In its report, the IMF said it expects the UK economy to shrink by 6.5% in 2020, while the global economy will contract by 3%.
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Coronavirus-related deaths in UK hospitals have risen to 12,107, an increase of 778 on Monday's total.
And more than one in five deaths in England and Wales is linked to coronavirus, figures show.
The Office for National Statistics data showed the virus was mentioned on 3,475 death certificates in the week ending 3 April.
It helped push the total number of deaths in that week to more than 16,000 - a record high and 6,000 more than expected at this time of year.
'Unprecedented financial help'
The OBR's estimates said a three-month lockdown would push up the UK's borrowing bill to an estimated £273bn this financial year, or 14% of gross domestic product (GDP).
This would represent the largest deficit as a share of GDP since World War Two.
While borrowing is expected to jump, the OBR said the government's unprecedented financial help for workers and businesses would help to limit any long-term damage.
The OBR expects a more lasting impact on unemployment, which is estimated to rise by 2.1 million to 3.4 million by the end of June.
Under this scenario, unemployment would hit 10%, from its current 3.9% rate, before easing to around 7.3% at the end of the year.
The jobless rate is expected to remain elevated until 2023, when it is expected to drop back to 4%, in line with the OBR's March forecast.
These are incredible numbers indicated by the Government's official, though independent forecasters at the OBR.
They illustrate what is at stake, and why the Government has to get its economic rescue plans to spot on. They will feature at the COBR discussions. Indeed some senior public health experts believe that the Government needs an economic counterpart to the influential SAGE committee of scientists.
But this isn't quite about a direct trade-off. That existed clearly on the way in - the economy was shut down to protect public health. On the way out of these measures, the balance is not straightforward.
If the lockdown is lifted prematurely, the health system could fall over, workers might just refuse to go to work anyway, and none of that would be positive for the economy.
Indeed when it is lifted, the absence of a vaccine means that these trade-offs are likely to be considered week by week and sector by sector, for months to come.
Hit to public finances
The OBR expects UK debt to remain elevated for years to come, with extra borrowing expected to push Britain's debt share to above 100% of GDP this financial year under the three-month lockdown scenario.
While this will drop sharply as the UK economy recovers, public debt is expected to remain at 84.9% of GDP in four years' time, much higher than the 75.3% forecast in the March Budget.
However, the OBR said extra spending by the Treasury to support the economy was crucial to limit the economic damage.
"The government's policy response will have substantial direct budgetary costs, but the measures should help limit the long-term damage to the economy and public finances - the costs of inaction would certainly have been higher."
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