Better-off pensioners should voluntarily pay back their taxpayer-funded benefits, the Work and Pensions Secretary declares. 
Iain Duncan Smith says he “would encourage” elderly people who can well afford to pay for their their own heating bills, bus passes and television licences to return the money to the state.
His intervention comes after David Cameron vetoed efforts by some ministers - including Mr Duncan Smith - to stop paying the benefits to all pensioners, no matter how wealthy, while the rest of the welfare budget is being squeezed.
Mr Duncan Smith previously called the £2billion-a-year universal payments regime an “anomaly”. However, in an interview with The Sunday Telegraph today, he says there are “no plans to change it”.
Instead, he urges the better off simply to repay the money to the Treasury. He says: “It is up to them, if they don’t want it, to hand it back.
“I would encourage everybody who reads the Telegraph and doesn’t need it, to hand it back.”
The future of the pensioner payments has already sparked a fierce political row with Nick Clegg, the Deputy Prime Minister, claiming they are “difficult to explain” at a time of spending cuts.
Vincent Cable, the Liberal Democrat Business Secretary, has called for the payments to be taxed, arguing that this would allow ministers to claw back hundreds of millions of pounds while avoiding the need for expensive and bureaucratic means-testing.
The winter fuel allowance is worth £200 to state pensioners, or £300 to the over-80s. On reaching 60, prescriptions become free and concessionary bus travel is offered at state pension age, with the level of concession varying across the country. At 75, pensioners receive free television licences, worth £145.50 for colour sets.
Mr Cameron, who pledged at the 2010 general election to protect the benefits for a whole parliament, is understood to have ruled out any move against them in the Conservative manifesto for the 2015 contest.
The Prime Minister is said to be unwilling to go into an election campaign armed with a vote-loser among the elderly, the age group most likely to turn at polling stations and whose ranks contain many natural Tory supporters.
Mr Duncan Smith says: “I’ve no idea what we will put into the manifesto...I have no indication of change. It’s fair to say that [pensioners] are more vulnerable than others and we need to be very careful about what and when we do things, if we ever do.”
