Government data shows most of those who do not claim their pension credit will miss out through means-testing
The Department for Work and Pensions data showed about 1.6 million disabled benefits will lose entitlement to the winter fuel payment. Photograph: Yui Mok/PA
More than three-quarters of a million pensioners who need the winter fuel payment will lose out on it when Labour begins means-testing the benefit, according to the government’s own equality analysis.
After the government was criticised for not carrying out a full impact assessment of the change, the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) quietly released a document on Friday night which predicted that about 780,000 pensioners whose low incomes mean they are eligible for the payment will stop getting it when it becomes means-tested.
From this winter, only pensioners who are entitled to receive pension credit or certain other benefits will continue to receive the winter fuel allowance, stripping an estimated 10 million pensioners of the tax-free payment of up to £300 a year.
The newly released government assessment, published in response to a freedom of information request, revealed that 880,000 pensioners who are entitled to pension credit do not claim this benefit. It predicted that only about 10% of them will take up the credit when the changes kick in, meaning 780,000 pensioners on low incomes will miss out on the winter fuel payments they are eligible for and currently receive.
The assessment also revealed that the changes, which the government has said are part of efforts to stabilise the economy and are expected to save about £1.3bn, would have a negative impact on the majority of pensioners with a disability and those aged over 80.
Nearly three-quarters (71%) of disabled pensioners – about 1.6 million people – and 83% of people over 80 will lose their entitlement to the payment, the figures showed.
These figures are based on “equality analyses” which “are not impact assessments and not routinely published alongside secondary legislation”, the DWP wrote in its FoI response, adding that pensioners with a disability are disproportionately likely to retain the payment.
Yesterday, after days of No 10 refusing to comment, Keir Starmer’s deputy spokesperson confirmed that there had been no wider assessment to try to establish how many affected pensioners may face health vulnerabilities, and could thus be at risk.
The spokesperson told reporters the only assessment made before the policy announcement was a standard legal one of potential equalities impacts.
When Starmer was asked by reporters travelling with him to Washington DC whether an impact assessment of the policy would be published, he said: “There isn’t a report on my desk which somehow we’re not showing, that I’m not showing, as simple as that.”
The Conservative party chairman, Richard Fuller, said: “At the start of this week, Labour MPs marched through the lobbies to cover up the impact of the winter fuel cuts which will slash support for many pensioners in their own constituencies.
“This shocking new data, sneaked out by the government, now shows 780,000 people who should be entitled to the payment will lose out, as will 1.6 million people with a disability.”
He called on Labour to immediately conduct and publish a full impact assessment of “this harmful policy”.
The DWP said: “The government has followed its legal and statutory duties ahead of introducing these changes and will continue to do so.”