hello and welcome to our look ahead to what the the papers will be bringing us tomorrow. with me are sonia sodha, chief leader writer at the observer and tom newton dunn, chief political commentator with times radio. welcome back to you both. so let s start with some of the pages we already have. the metro writes that the eu has threatened to take life saving covid jabs bound for britain after blaming the uk for what it calls the continent s creaking vaccination rollout . the financial times also leads on the vaccine roll out, writing that the nhs s targets are in peril after a significant reduction in supplies. the telegraph adds that vaccine shortages mean that no more first appointments for covid jabs will be booked in april as supplies arriving in britain continue to be disrupted. the times adds that a fall in provision from astrazeneca is understood to be the reason why very few people will receive their first doses next month. the guardian writes that people under
equally distributed. the richest four fifths of the population was managing to save up to £400 per month more than normal through the pandemic, an average of about £170. in contrast, the poorest fifth of the population had to eat into savings or borrow about the same amount per month. around town, socially distant queues to get into banks, perhaps to put money in rather than take it out, as in the previous financial crisis. elsewhere, things are far from back to normal. most of these shops will reopen. some will not because we have seen a generational shift in how we buy and consume that will change our high streets and city centres forever. the rise in the proportion of online sales has been staggering. it took a decade to grow slowly from 10% to 20% of total sales. injust 12 months, that has jumped to 36% change that would have taken a decade and a half injust one year. so as the tide goes out on the support, the pandemic aftermath will see enduring changes to the way w