To work out the effect of this on your "usual" take home (drawings), you need to work out what fraction of your expenses will still continue, and what won't. You also need to know what fraction your usual expenses are compared with your profits (profits + expenses = turnover).
Say your profit is ÂŁ25k, and your usual expenses are ÂŁ16k. Which means your turnover - usual total income, would be ÂŁ41k.
Of those ÂŁ16k expenses, ÂŁ11k is stock, and ÂŁ1k is advertising (which you're not going be be spending on at the moment). ÂŁ12k out of ÂŁ16k is 75%, or, as a fraction, 0.75 (12/16).
You will be paid 80% of your profits, which is 0.8 x ÂŁ25k, which is ÂŁ20k. You still have to pay your unavoidable expenses, which is ÂŁ16k - ÂŁ12k, which is ÂŁ4k. Which leaves you with ÂŁ16k, which is 64% of your usual take-home.
If you know your profit (in ÂŁÂŁÂŁ) and you know your expenses that will still need to continue (in ÂŁÂŁÂŁ), then it's relatively simple: new take-home, "y" is:
y = (0.8 x profit) minus (expenses that need to continue).
As a percentage of your usual take-home, this is:
(y / profit) * 100
Plugging in the numbers for my own situation, I'm at about 52% in theory; although because my business has been growing over the past 3 years, my actual percentage is considerably lower, because the number they will use for "profit" is the average of those 3 years, and is a lot lower than it is currently. But I'll take that.
For some folk, their percentage of their expenses that they can't stop will be much higher. As others have said, reduce your unnecessary expenses as much as you can. This is the same whether you're self-employed or not. On the other hand, I'd encourage you to carry on with your charitable giving as much as you can, as the poorest and those most in need are going to suffer the most.
Hope the maths bit was useful, anyway.