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Setting up a business involves complying with a range of legal requirements. Find out which ones apply to you and your new enterprise.

What particular regulations do specific types of business (such as a hotel, or a printer, or a taxi firm) need to follow? We explain some of the key legal issues to consider for 200 types of business.

While poor governance can bring serious legal consequences, the law can also protect business owners and managers and help to prevent conflict.

Whether you want to raise finance, join forces with someone else, buy or sell a business, it pays to be aware of the legal implications.

From pay, hours and time off to discipline, grievance and hiring and firing employees, find out about your legal responsibilities as an employer.

Marketing matters. Marketing drives sales for businesses of all sizes by ensuring that customers think of their brand when they want to buy.

Commercial disputes can prove time-consuming, stressful and expensive, but having robust legal agreements can help to prevent them from occurring.

Whether your business owns or rents premises, your legal liabilities can be substantial. Commercial property law is complex, but you can avoid common pitfalls.

With information and sound advice, living up to your legal responsibilities to safeguard your employees, customers and visitors need not be difficult or costly.

As information technology continues to evolve, legislation must also change. It affects everything from data protection and online selling to internet policies for employees.

Intellectual property (IP) isn't solely relevant to larger businesses or those involved in developing innovative new products: all products have IP.

Knowing how and when you plan to sell or relinquish control of your business can help you to make better decisions and achieve the best possible outcome.

From bereavement, wills, inheritance, separation and divorce to selling a house, personal injury and traffic offences, learn more about your personal legal rights.

FSB proposes employee equity plan to aid recovery

1 June 2021

The Federation of Small Businesses is calling on the government to help struggling companies by giving them the opportunity to convert state-backed loans into employee ownership trusts.

A new study, published by the Federation of Small Businesses (FSB) and Ownership at Work, has proposed that struggling companies that have taken out government-backed loans during the pandemic should be given the chance to convert their debt into employee ownership trusts (EOTs).

The call comes as the Office for Budget Responsibility warns that 40% of Bounce Back borrowers could default.

The FSB/Ownership at Work report, A Shares for Debt Recovery Plan, concludes that giving businesses the option to convert emergency bounce back loans into employee equity stakes will "protect livelihoods, spur productivity and pave the way for a small business-led recovery as we seek to emerge from the deepest recession in modern history".

It proposes that struggling small companies are given a time-limited amnesty under which Bounce Back Loans would be written off in exchange for all-employee equity stakes vested in employee ownership trusts. The private lenders providing the Bounce Back facilities would claim their 100% government guarantees in these instances.

More than 1.5 million Bounce Back facilities have now been approved, with a collective value of more than £46.5 billion. Over the winter, the FSB warned of an impending small business credit crunch as the share of its membership with debt describing their borrowing as "unmanageable" rose from 13% to 40%.

FSB national vice chair Martin McTague said: "When the Bounce Back Loan scheme launched we thought we'd have the pandemic under control by Christmas. That's not been the case, so there's understandably going to be a lot of small companies struggling to make the Bounce Back Loan repayments that are now kicking in.

"The government could leave it to the banks to enforce collection, thereby risking the destruction of thousands of ultimately viable companies, increased unemployment as the furlough scheme winds down and damage to local communities … But we're saying there is another way: give those who are cash-strapped the option to swap debt for employee equity."

Ownership at Work fellow and report author Nigel Mason said: "In times of adversity businesses know they have to innovate. Replacing unaffordable debt with an employee ownership stake can protect smaller companies in a way that ultimately benefits everyone involved.

"Business owners keep the doors open, super-charge employee motivation and have a new patient shareholder. Employees keep their jobs, can share in future profits and have a stronger voice in the business. Whilst government accepts the loss of some smaller loan repayments, by protecting otherwise viable businesses it invests in boosting the economy and avoids the extra cost of lost tax revenues and impact on individual lives.

"All-employee ownership is the UK's fastest growing business model for good reason: it helps individuals, businesses and local economies and is precisely the kind of innovative solution government should be backing to drive post-pandemic recovery."

Written by Rachel Miller.

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