The economics are simple. A baker rents a garden shed. Installs an oven. Sells homemade cakes online. Profit margins can hit 40%. I’ve seen figures from a Westminster source: some sheds net £1,000 a week. This is the Conservative vision of enterprise. Small. Nimble. Untaxed by red tape.
But the dream is cracking. The culprit? The Food Standards Agency. In a letter leaked to me, a senior FSA official warns these sheds could fall under the same hygiene rules as industrial bakeries. The cost of compliance would be ruinous. A stainless steel worktop alone runs into thousands. Then there’s the paperwork. HACCP plans. Allergen labelling. Local authority inspections.
Across the party, MPs are panicking. A backbench rebellion is simmering. I spoke to a Tory MP who asked not to be named. “This is a disaster. We promised to slash red tape, not strangle start-ups.” He’s right to worry. The cake shed economy is concentrated in the Red Wall - seats that flipped to Labour in the last election. These bakers are precisely the voters the Tories need to win back.
The numbers don’t lie. A survey by the Federation of Small Businesses found 60% of home bakers would quit if forced to upgrade kitchens. That’s thousands of jobs gone. And with a general election looming, No10 cannot afford to lose these votes.
Downing Street is aware. I’m told the Business Secretary is pushing for a carve-out. A “food business exemption” for micro-producers. But the FSA is digging in. Their line: food safety is non-negotiable. A draft memo seen by this desk suggests the Treasury is watching closely. They don’t want to choke a growth sector.
There’s a deeper game here. This is a proxy war between deregulators and consumer champions. The cake shed is the new frontier. If the FSA wins, the government must explain why it killed a Conservative success story. If industry wins, the Tories can point to it as proof they’ve slashed bureaucracy.
My sources indicate a decision by summer recess. Until then, expect backbench lobbying, a possible select committee inquiry, and plenty of tetchy exchanges between departments. The cake shed economy is about to become a political hot potato. I’d watch the polls in marginal constituencies. A lot rests on how this crumbles.








