By BBC News
Staff
The paper says that under the plans, an employee normally on 37 hours a week could do just 17 hours and still get their full wage via the government top-up.
The paper points out that this would be considerably cheaper than the furlough programme, which is reported to have cost almost £4bn in the last month alone.
In its own "rough" calculation, the FT says partially supporting wages of three million people would cost about £500m a month.
"Rishi's jobs lifeline" is the Daily Express assessment of Rishi Sunak's planned economic intervention.
The paper says the measures need to be "lasting, fair and effective" and not just "a series of piecemeal policies".
'Growing backlash'
At least one minister has reportedly threatened to resign, while up to 50 Conservative MPs are said to be ready to withhold support in a vote to approve the government's lockdown powers.
The glitch - which mistakenly assumes someone has been within two metres of an infected person for 15 minutes - is because the Bluetooth signal can be affected by surrounding objects.
But in an editorial for the Daily Mirror, the chief executive of NHS Providers, Chris Hopson, says the public should have "some sympathy" for the app's creators because it has been built in a hurry.
The paper says the BBC had hoped to make "huge sums of money" by selling the site made famous by the likes of The Beatles and Pink Floyd to developers.
The building has grade II listed status - meaning any interested parties face significant extra cost. But with the BBC board said to be "so concerned" about the financial impact of not being able to develop the site, it has launched a "strong appeal" against elements of the listing.
'Christmas lockdown warning'
According to minutes from the latest meetings of the Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies (Sage), experts are concerned about infected students "spilling" out from university at the end of term and causing large outbreaks of Covid-19 in their home communities.
Nick Hillman, the director of the Higher Education Policy Unit, says students staying on campus during the festive period should be viewed as just "another sacrifice" in the battle against the virus.
Described by the Mail as a "fungal foe", it is said to thrive in water-logged conditions. But researchers believe all hope isn't lost for fans of a G&T because some trees appear to be resistant to the pathogen which cannot spread through their roots.
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