Unemployment at 4MILLION in a year, GDP to take FIVE YEARS to recover and the biggest peacetime deficit EVER: Budget watchdog's dire predictions as it warns Brits face years of tax rises and spending cuts to pay off Covid bill
The UK faces the biggest peacetime deficit in history with the risk of four million people out of work by next year - and the economy might not recover until 2025.
In a bleak new assessment, the government's OBR watchdog warned tax rises and spending cuts - potentially as much as 7p on the basic rate of income tax - are inevitable as it poured cold water on hopes of a 'V-shaped' bounceback from coronavirus.
It said GDP will fall by up to 14 per cent this year, the worst recession in 300 years, with national debt bigger than the whole economy. Underlining the scale of the hit, government liabilities will be £710billion more than previously expected by 2023-4. That is equivalent to nearly £11,000 for every man, woman and child in the UK.
Output might not return to last year's level until the end of 2024, according to the estimates. Accounting for inflation, the country will still be 6 per cent poorer in 2025 in the gloomiest outcome.
Meanwhile, unemployment could peak at 13 per cent in the first quarter of 2021 - which would mean more than four million people on the dole queue. That would be significantly worse than the 11.9 per cent jobless rate from 1984, and the highest since modern records began in the 1970s. The 'central' forecast is that 15 per cent of the 9.4million furloughed jobs will be lost.
Labour seized on the figures to demand the furlough scheme be kept in place for struggling sectors after its October end date.
The report came as the next head of the OBR warned that the government can no longer rely on inflation to tackle its £2trillion debt pile.
Richard Hughes, who is set to take charge of the Office for Budget Responsibility later this year said previously the 'trick' for politicians had been to whittle down the 'real value' of the country's liabilities.
However, that will not be possible with the massive debts being racked up during the coronavirus crisis as around a third of the stock was now linked to the RPI inflation rate.
The respected IFS think-tank has suggested that tax rises equivalent to £35billion a year will be needed to stabilise the government finances once the immediate crisis subsides.
As an indication of scale, that would be roughly 7p on the basic rate of income tax.
In other twists and turns in the raging coroanvirus crisis today:
- Official figures showed GDP only rose by 1.8 per cent in May and is still nearly a quarter lower than in March, pouring cold water on hopes of a V-shaped recovery;
- The government is set to make masks compulsory in shops from July 24 with £100 fines for not obeying the rules, despite anger from retailers;
- Scientists have warned that a second wave of coronavirus this winter could result in 120,000 hospital deaths;
- The number of people dying of coronavirus rose in Wales during the first week of July for the first time since April, official statistics revealed;

The OBR's downside scenario sees unemployment rising to more than four million next year - with a rate higher than seen in the 1980s

Public debt will soar as the UK reels from the coronavirus crisis, according to the watchdog's central scenario today. By 2023-4 the liabilities will be around £660billion higher than forecast in March before the chaos hit - and that does not include an extra £50billion from the mini-Budget

Output might not return to last year's level until the end of 2024, according to the new OBR estimates. Accounting for inflation, the country will still be 6 per cent poorer in 2025 in the gloomiest outcome

The OBR suggested the national debt will be bigger than the whole economy in all but the most optimistic scenario

A shocking longer forecast from the OBR suggests that national debt will be more than five times the size of the economy by 2070

The UK's debt pile is bigger than GDP for the first time in decades due to the impact of the coronavirus crisis. The chart shows that the debt-GDP ratio has been much higher in the past, but Mr Hughes said inflation could no longer be relied on to tackle it
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