Legislation and Business
Why Legislation Exists
Businesses operate within a legal framework set by the government. The purpose of legislation is to protect the interests of groups who might otherwise be exploited — primarily consumers, employees, and the wider public. Without legal protections, a business seeking to maximise profit could sell unsafe products, refuse to pay fair wages, or discriminate against job applicants without consequence.
Legislation: laws passed by Parliament that set out the rules businesses must follow. Compliance is not optional — failure to comply can result in fines, prosecution, and reputational damage.
The Edexcel specification focuses on two categories of law:
- Consumer law — protects people who buy goods and services
- Employment law — protects people who work for businesses
Understanding the principles behind these laws matters more for this exam than memorising the names of specific Acts. The specification tests whether you can explain why the law exists, how it affects businesses, and what happens when a business fails to comply.
Extra context (not required in the exam): in practice, consumer protections come from legislation such as the Consumer Rights Act 2015 and the Sale of Goods Act. Employment protections come from legislation such as the Equality Act 2010, the National Minimum Wage Act, and the Health and Safety at Work Act 1974. You do not need to cite these by name in the exam, but they may help you understand where the principles come from.
Principles of Consumer Law
Consumer law establishes that goods and services must meet minimum standards. The specification identifies two principles: quality and consumer rights.
Quality: goods sold by a business must be of satisfactory quality. This means they must work as a reasonable person would expect, be free from defects, be safe to use, and last for a reasonable period. A smartphone that stops working after three days, a jacket with a stitching defect, or a takeaway meal that causes food poisoning all fall below the required standard.
Consumer rights: consumers have the right to receive products that match their description, are fit for the purpose stated, and are as described in advertising or labelling. If a business sells a product that does not match its description — for example, advertising a laptop as having 16GB of RAM when it only has 8GB — the consumer has the right to a refund, repair, or replacement.
| Consumer law principle | What it requires from the business | Example of a breach |
|---|---|---|
| Satisfactory quality | Goods are free from defects and work as expected | A washing machine breaks down within a week of purchase |
| Fit for purpose | Products do what they are designed or claimed to do | A waterproof jacket leaks in light rain |
| As described | Products match their advertising and labelling | A "handmade" product is actually machine-manufactured |
For service businesses, the same principles apply: a hairdresser who damages a customer's hair through negligence, or a builder who leaves a job unfinished, is in breach of consumer law.
Exam tip: when applying consumer law to a business scenario, identify which principle is violated (quality, fitness for purpose, or as described), explain what the consumer is entitled to (refund, repair, replacement), and explain what this costs the business in practice (processing returns, lost stock, reputational damage).
Principles of Employment Law
Employment law governs the relationship between a business and its workers across four areas that Edexcel specifies: recruitment, pay, discrimination, and health and safety.
Recruitment: businesses must not discriminate against job applicants. Job advertisements must describe genuine requirements of the role. A business cannot refuse to interview a candidate because of their age, gender, ethnicity, religion, disability, or other protected characteristic.
Pay: workers are entitled to receive at least the national minimum wage (NMW), which is set by the government and varies by age group. Businesses must also provide payslips showing deductions clearly. Failure to pay the NMW is illegal and subject to government enforcement and financial penalties.
Discrimination: employees must not be treated less favourably because of protected characteristics — including age, sex, race, disability, religion or belief, and sexual orientation — either in recruitment, promotion, training, or day-to-day treatment. Both direct discrimination (treating someone unfairly because of a characteristic) and indirect discrimination (applying a rule that disadvantages a group) are prohibited.
Health and safety: employers have a legal duty of care to protect the health, safety, and welfare of their employees at work. This covers providing safe equipment, adequate training, appropriate protective clothing, and a safe working environment. Businesses must carry out risk assessments and take reasonable steps to eliminate or control hazards.
Exam tip: the spec tests principles, not Acts. Write "the law on health and safety requires businesses to carry out risk assessments" rather than quoting a specific piece of legislation.
The Impact of Legislation on Businesses
Meeting legal obligations costs money. The specification asks you to understand both the cost of compliance and the consequences of non-compliance.
Costs of compliance:
- Training: staff must be trained to follow procedures (food hygiene, health and safety, data handling). A restaurant employing 15 staff might spend thousands of pounds each year on food hygiene certification.
- Procedures and administration: writing employment contracts, conducting risk assessments, keeping payroll records, and responding to consumer complaints all take management time that has an opportunity cost.
- Higher wages: when the government raises the national minimum wage, businesses with large numbers of minimum-wage workers face a significant increase in their wage bill — a major cost for retailers, hospitality businesses, and care homes.
- Product changes: if consumer law requires a product to meet new safety standards, the business may need to redesign the product, use different materials, or conduct additional quality testing.
Consequences of non-compliance:
- Fines and prosecution: a business that fails to pay the minimum wage, breaches health and safety rules, or sells defective goods can be fined by regulators or prosecuted in court.
- Reputational damage: news of a company flouting employment law or selling unsafe products spreads quickly — particularly via social media. Lost consumer trust can cause long-term decline in sales.
- Legal action: employees who are discriminated against or injured at work can bring tribunal claims; consumers who are sold defective goods can seek compensation through the courts.
- Operational disruption: if a business is shut down by health and safety inspectors — for example, a restaurant with severe hygiene violations — it loses trading days and may have to invest heavily in remediation before reopening.
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Worked Example — A Small Café and New Food Hygiene Requirements
Scenario: a small café with 8 employees is told by the local authority that it must comply with updated food hygiene standards. This requires: staff to complete a level 2 food hygiene certificate, the kitchen to be upgraded with new hand-washing stations, and temperature monitoring logs to be kept for all refrigerated stock.
Costs of compliance:
- Food hygiene training: 8 staff × £50 per course = £400
- Kitchen modifications (hand-washing stations, signage): £1,200
- Management time to implement temperature logging: approximately 2 hours per week ongoing
Consequences of not complying:
- The local authority can issue a hygiene improvement notice, closing the kitchen until the issue is resolved — potentially days or weeks of lost revenue.
- If a customer becomes ill from food prepared in a non-compliant kitchen, the café faces a compensation claim, media coverage, and possible prosecution.
- A low hygiene rating displayed on the door deters customers, reducing footfall and revenue.
How the café might respond (1.5.5): the owner increases menu prices by 20p per item to partially recover compliance costs, applies for a small business grant to cover the kitchen upgrade, and schedules training on a quiet Tuesday when the café is least busy to minimise disruption.
This example shows that compliance has a real cost, but non-compliance carries far greater financial and reputational risk.
Business Responses to Legislation (1.5.5)
When new legislation is introduced or existing rules are tightened, businesses have several options. The specification asks you to recognise these response strategies.
Update policies and procedures: rewrite employment contracts, update staff handbooks, and introduce new sign-off processes. A business that updates its equal opportunities policy in response to new guidance on discrimination signals to employees and job applicants that it takes the law seriously.
Invest in compliance training: send staff on relevant courses, bring in a specialist trainer, or use e-learning platforms. Training is a recurring cost — legal requirements change over time.
Adjust pricing to cover compliance costs: if new minimum wage rates add £30,000 to an annual wage bill, a business can offset some of this by raising prices. Whether this is viable depends on how price-sensitive customers are and what competitors are doing.
Redesign products or services: if new consumer law requires products to meet higher safety standards, the business may need to source different components, update its manufacturing process, or redesign packaging.
Lobby for changes in the law: larger businesses and trade associations can participate in consultations when new legislation is proposed, seeking to shape rules that are workable in practice. This is a longer-term response and not available to most small businesses.
Exam tip: when asked how a business responds to legislation, always link the response to a specific type of business in the question. A large supermarket chain can absorb compliance costs more easily than a sole-trader café — this distinction earns application marks.
Exam Technique for Legislation Questions
1. Distinguish consumer law from employment law
Make clear in your answer which area of law is relevant. Mixing them up loses marks.
2. Apply to the business in the question
Generic answers such as "the business might get fined" score fewer marks than "a small café that fails to comply with food hygiene rules could be forced to close temporarily, losing several days of revenue."
3. Show both sides: compliance costs vs non-compliance consequences
Most discuss or evaluate questions reward balanced analysis: "while training costs money, the alternative — a food safety prosecution or closure order — would cost far more."
4. Remember that legislation affects different businesses differently
Small businesses often find compliance proportionally more costly than large ones — they cannot spread fixed compliance costs across as large a revenue base.
5. Common mistakes to avoid
- Quoting specific Acts by name — the spec tests principles only. This wastes time and risks citing the wrong Act.
- Saying legislation "always hurts businesses" — compliance can create competitive advantage if it signals quality or safety to consumers.
- Confusing health and safety law (protects employees) with consumer law (protects customers) — both exist, and both are in the spec.
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