2.5.2 - Legislation Flashcards

1
Q

What is legislation

A
  • A set of laws suggested by government and made official by parliament
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2
Q

What is the consumer protection law

A
  • Consumer Rights Act 2015
    -The law protects consumer rights when they buy goods or services.
  • Customers have legal rights if the item you bought is:
  • broken or damaged (‘not of satisfactory quality’)
  • unusable (‘not fit for purpose’)
  • not what was
    advertised or doesn’t match the seller’s description
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3
Q

How does the consumer protection act effect business

A
  • Under the consumer
    protection act a business must not give false or misleading information about products
  • E.g. fake designer handbags marked as genuine are in breach of the act
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4
Q

What are the employee protection laws

A
  • The UK government has, over time, passed lots of laws designed to help and protect the UK worker.
  • These acts makes sure the UK worker gets paid when they are sick, gets paternity and maternity pay, is not discriminated against, gets a fair wage and is treated equally
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5
Q

What are the different employee protection laws

A
  • Employment Rights Act 1996
  • Minimum Wage Act 1998
  • Working Time Regulations 1998
  • Pensions Act 2008
  • Equality Act 2010
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6
Q

What is the Employee protection: Employment Rights Act

A
  • States duties and rights of the employer and employee
  • Includes the employee’s rights to maternity and paternity leave
  • Details regarding termination of employment
  • Right to a written contract of employment within 60 days of starting work
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7
Q

What is the Employee protection: National Minimum Wage Act

A
  • Applies to nearly all workers and sets hourly rates below which pay must not be allowed to fall
  • Paying the minimum wage will raise costs for a business
  • This may have an impact on their profit margins or profitability
  • Failure to do so can result in fines or prosecution
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8
Q

What is the Employee protection: National living wage

A
  • The National Living Wage is higher than the National Minimum Wage - workers get it if they’re over 25.
  • This is projected to rise to £9 an hour by 2020
  • Businesses that fail to pay it could face maximum penalty of £20,000 per worker
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9
Q

What is the Employee protection: Working Time Regulations 1998

A
  • These regulations makes sure that there is a limit of 48 hours in a working week (though workers can choose to work more if they want to)
  • Workers also have the right to 11 hours rest a day and the right to a day off each week and the right to an in-work rest break if the working day is longer than 6 hours and the right to 4 weeks paid leave per year
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10
Q

What is the Employee protection: Pensions Act 2008

A
  • Under the Pensions Act 2008, every employer in the UK must put their qualifying employees into a pension scheme and pay contributions. This is called ‘automatic enrolment’
  • Once the business has set up a pension scheme and put their eligible staff into it, then they must continue to make the payments that are due into the scheme every month
  • The Pensions Regulator monitors the contributions that are paid into workplace pensions, and will fine the business is they are not being paid
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11
Q

What is the Employee protection: Equality Act 2010

A
  • The Equality Act 2010 legally protects people from discrimination in the workplace
  • It replaced previous antidiscrimination laws with a single Act
  • A business needs to make sure that it complies with the law during recruitment and during the contract term of the employee
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12
Q

What is the environmental protection law

A
  • Polluted air, noise pollution and chemical spills are some examples of how business can have a negative impact on the environment
  • The Environmental Protection Act of 1990 attempts to control
    pollution in terms of business waste that is disposed of in the air, on land and in the sea
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13
Q

What is competition policy law

A
  • Legislation in place by the government designed to prevent collusion – price fixing by businesses getting together and agreeing a price to charge for their products
  • CMA is the competition and Markets Authority who are independent regulators
  • The CMA aims to “promote competition for the benefit of consumers”
  • They investigate mergers that restrict competition
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14
Q

What is the Health and Safety at Work Act: workplace hazard

A
  • In general, health and safety laws apply to all businesses
  • As an employer, or a self employed person, they are responsible for health and safety in the business
  • Health and safety laws are there to protect the owners, the employees and the public from workplace dangers
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15
Q

What is the Health and Safety at Work Act: employer duties

A

✓Prevent accidents and cases of work related ill health by managing the health and safety risks in the workplace
✓Provide clear instructions and information, and adequate training, to ensure employees are competent to do their work
✓Engage and consult with employees on day-to-day health and safety conditions Implement emergency procedures – evacuation in case of fire or other significant incident.
✓Maintain safe and healthy working conditions, provide and maintain plant, equipment and machinery, and ensure safe storage / use of substances

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16
Q

What is the Impact of legislation on business cost

A
  • A business will have to meet all of the consumer, employment and recruitment laws
  • This may mean additional costs :
  • Training staff
  • Protection equipment for staff e.g. hairnets or googles
  • Cost of paying national minimum wage
17
Q

What is the Impact of legislation on business training needs

A
  • Businesses will need to make sure that all their employees are trained and that the training is up-to-date
  • This will make sure that the business is legally compliant
  • This way the owners of the business will not face fines or prison
18
Q

What is the Impact of legislation on business recruitment

A
  • Race, sex, age or disability discrimination is illegal in UK business, so businesses must be careful to recruit within the equality law
  • They must offer equal pay and promotion opportunities for women and ethnic minorities