What is the difference between Statutory Requirements and Regulatory Requirements?

The term "statutory and regulatory requirements" appear in ISO 9001:2015 for 12 times. These two requirements together are also called as the legal requirements.

However, the question here is: "What is the difference between statutory and regulatory requirements?".

The difference between statutory and regulatory requirements is a subtle one. In general, a statutory requirement is an established rule by law, like copyright, trademark protections, Sarbanes-Oxley Act (SOX). A regulatory requirement is established by government agencies.

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The following will help you discern between the two:

Statutory

Example: A corporation is legally required to pay corporate taxes to the federal government. This requirement is statutory, as it is based on laws passed by Congress.

Regulatory

Example: The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) sets regulations for the labeling of food products. These regulations dictate what kind of information must be available to consumers on food packaging. While the FDA's authority to do this is based on statutory laws, the specific requirements are regulatory.

Why Do We Have to Comply?

  1. Legal Requirement: Both statutory laws and regulations carry the weight of law, so failing to comply can result in legal action.
  2. Public Safety and Trust: Many of these rules and guidelines are put in place to protect the general public or to ensure fair commerce, so compliance helps maintain public safety and trust.
  3. Business Continuity: Non-compliance can not only result in financial penalties but can also cause businesses to lose licenses, face public backlash, or even be forced to shut down operations.

Differences

Statutory vs Regulatory

Attribute Statutory Regulatory
What It Is Laws enacted by a legislative body Rules or guidelines by governmental agencies
Source Elected representatives in a legislative body Governmental agencies or bodies
Compliance Penalty Fines, lawsuits, imprisonment Fines, lawsuits, other penalties
Example Corporate tax laws FDA food labeling regulations
Why Comply Legal requirement, public safety, business continuity Legal requirement, public safety, business continuity
Scope Broader framework Detailed rules within that framework
Creation Process More public input, debated and passed by elected officials Less direct public input, often created by experts in the field