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consumer protection
(redirected from Consumer protection laws)

   Also found in: Legal, Encyclopedia, Wikipedia 0.06 sec.

consumer protection

Laws and measures designed to ensure fair trading for buyers. Responsibility for checking goods and services for quality, safety, and suitability has in the past few years moved increasingly away from the consumer to the producer.

In earlier days it was assumed that consumers could safeguard themselves by common sense, testing before purchase, and confronting the seller personally if they were dissatisfied. Today the technical complexities of products, the distance of sales outlets from the original producer, and pressures from advertising require protection for the consumer. In the USA, both federal and state governments make special provisions for consumer protection. In 1962 President Kennedy set out the four basic rights of the consumer: to safety, to be informed, to choose, and to be heard. There are many private consumer associations, and among the most active and effective of crusaders for greater protection has been Ralph Nader.



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? Mentioned in ? References in periodicals archive
 
Responsibilities: Ensures soundness of financial institutions and compliance with consumer protection laws
But Richard Daynard, a Northeastern University law professor who runs the Obesity and Law Project at the Public Health Advocacy Institute, thinks he has found a solution: suing food companies under state consumer protection laws, which "avoids complicated causation issues.
The plaintiffs cross-moved for a partial summary declaratory judgment holding that the Hoechst-Andrx agreement was per se illegal under the antitrust and/or consumer protection laws of each state in which the plaintiffs bad asserted claims.
 
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