Budget 'fudge' and James Corden interviews David Cameron - front pages
By Andy McFarlaneBBC News
Fallout from the Budget remains on some front pages, with the Daily Mail saying Chancellor George Osborne's decision to stop people being forced to use their pension pots to buy an annuity has led to a "stampede" to escape "raw deals".
However, the Financial Times says the "pensions revolution" has thrown into question the profitability of some of Britain's biggest insurers amid "predictions of the demise of the £12bn a year individual annuity market".
The Times says Mr Osborne has been accused of "fudging" data to balance the books. It quotes the Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) as saying that "permanent giveaways are being paid for by temporary takeaways".
IFS figures also lead the Daily Telegraph, which says more than two million people have been "dragged" into the 40p income tax rate under the coalition. Figures suggest the Budget cost higher rate taxpayers £546 per year, it says.
The Sun reworks a poster for the film Frost/Nixon, about Sir David Frost's interviews with then US President Richard Nixon, to illustrate a story about its guest editor, comedian James Corden, interviewing PM David Cameron.
An image of triple killer Joanna Dennehy is on the front of the Daily Mirror, which claims she's written "love letters" from prison. The paper leads on the sighting of "debris" in the Indian Ocean, saying it could be from missing flight MH370.
The Daily Express also leads on the search for the Malaysia Airlines jet. It says a "bungled" hijack may have forced it to veer thousands of miles of course and that investigators are examining a call made from the cockpit after take-off.
The Daily Star publishes a "chilling theory" that the missing Boeing 777 was hijacked for a "spectacular" terror attack on a secret island installation used by the US military.
The Independent uses a photograph taken from the cockpit of one of the Australian planes searching for the jet. Its lead story says a new vaccine against meningitis B is to be made available free on the NHS.
Its sister paper, the i, uses a large image of a baby with a sticking plaster to illustrate the vaccine story. It says the Department of Health performed a U-turn on a previous recommendation not to introduce a full vaccination programme.
The Guardian reports the latest tensions between the West and Russia over its "seizure" of Crimea from Ukraine. The US has blacklisted key associates of the Russian president and frozen the assets of a Kremlin-linked bank, it says.
Ministers fuelled racial hatred of immigrants by failing to stop "a stream of false claims" about them being involved in benefits tourism and crime, according to MPs quoted in the Metro. The Home Office rejects the allegations, it says.
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