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United States
Department of
Agriculture
Economic
Research
Service
Economic
Information
Bulletin
Number 82
October 2011
Food SafetyAudits,
Plant Characteristics,
and FoodSafety
Technology UseinMeat
and Poultry Plants
Michael Ollinger, Mary K. Muth, Shawn A. Karns,
and Zanethia Choice
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http://www.ers.usda.gov/briefing/FoodSafety/private.htm
Recommended citation format for this publication:
Ollinger, Michael, Mary K. Muth. Shawn A. Karns, and Zanethia Choice.
Food SafetyAudits,PlantCharacteristics,andFoodSafetyTechnologyUse
in MeatandPoultry Plants, EIB-82, U.S. Dept. of Agriculture, Economic
Research Service. October 2011.
Cover photo: USDA, Agricultural Research Service.
Use of commercial and trade names does not imply approval or
constitute endorsement by USDA.
United States
Department
of Agriculture
www.ers.usda.gov
A Report from the Economic Research Service
Economic
Information
Bulletin
Number 82
October 2011
Food SafetyAudits,Plant
Characteristics, andFoodSafety
Technology UseinMeatand
Poultry Plants
Abstract
Food safetytechnology can increase a company’s capacity to prevent a foodborne
contamination. A foodsafety audit—a quality control tool in which an auditor observes
whether a plant’s processing practices and technologies are compatible with good food
safety practices—can indicate how effectively foodsafetytechnology is being used.
Fast food restaurants, grocery stores, and other major customers of meatandpoultry
processing plants conduct their own audits or hire auditors to assess the soundness of a
plant’s processing operation. Meatandpoultryplants can also audit themselves as a way
to help maintain process control. In this report, we document the extent of foodsafety
audits inmeatandpoultry processing plants. We also examine the associations between
the use of audits andplant size, firm structure, andfoodsafetytechnology use. Results
show that larger plants, plants subject to foodsafetyaudits,andplants that are part of a
multiplant firm use more foodsafetytechnology than other plants. Plants subject to both
plant-hired and customer-hired audits had greater technologyuse than single (plant- or
customer-hired) audit plants.
Keywords: Meatandpoultry processing, safety standards, product recalls, foodsafety
technology, foodsafety audits
Michael Ollinger, ollinger@ers.usda.gov
Mary K. Muth
Shawn A. Karns
Zanethia Choice
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Economic Research Service / USDA
Acknowledgments
The authors would like to thank Jessica Todd, Ephraim Liebtag, Laurian
Unnevehr, Elise Golan, and Jay Variyam, USDA, Economic Research
Service, and William K. Shaw, USDA, FoodSafetyand Inspection Service
(FSIS), as well as three anonymous reviewers for their helpful reviews. We
also thank our editor, Priscilla Smith, and our designer, Susan DeGeorge.
Michael Ollinger is an economist with USDA’s Economic Research Service.
Zanethia Choice was an intern with ERS when this research was conducted;
she is now in graduate school at the University of Florida. Mary K. Muth
and Shawn A. Karns are with RTI International, a nonprofit research institute
based in Research Triangle Park, NC.
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Economic Research Service / USDA
Contents
Summary. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . iv
Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
Types of Audits and Reasons for Using Them . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
Auditor Services and the Incentives To Use Them . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
Types of Audits and Their Incentives . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
Audit Compliance and Audit Certification . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
Number of Audits and the Incentives for FoodSafety . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
Economic Framework . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
Why Plants Make FoodSafety Investments andUse Auditor Services . . . 7
Plant Size and Firm Type, FoodSafety Investment, and the Use of
Auditor Services . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
Survey Techniques and the Data . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
Variable Measurement. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
Construction of a FoodSafetyTechnology Index. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
Discussion of the Data . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
Concluding Discussion. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
References. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27
Appendix A: Survey Procedures . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30
Appendix B: Index Construction and Descriptive Statistics . . . . . . . . . 33
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Economic Research Service / USDA
Summary
What Is the Issue?
Food contamination poses serious threats to human health as well as to the
economic viability of meatandpoultry plants. Foodsafetytechnology can
increase a company’s capacity to prevent a foodborne contamination. A food
safety audit—a quality control tool in which an auditor observes whether a
plant’s processing practices and technologies are compatible with good food
safety practices—can indicate how effectively foodsafetytechnology is
being used. Fast food restaurants, grocery stores, and other major customers
of meatandpoultry processing plants conduct their own audits or hire audi-
tors to assess the soundness of a plant’s processing operation. Meatand
poultry plants also can audit themselves as a way to help maintain process
control and as a marketing tool. In this report, we document the extent of
food safety audits in U.S. meatandpoultry processing plantsand examine
the association between the use of audits andplant size, firm structure, and
food safetytechnology use.
What Were the Study Findings?
•In the poultry slaughter, cattle slaughter, and ready-to-eat products (e.g.,
luncheon meats) industries, at least 90 percent of output is from audited
plants.
•In the hog slaughter, ground beef, and not-ready-to-eat products (e.g.,
meat cuts) industries, at least 70 percent of output is from audited plants.
•More than one-half of all plants were audited in the poultry slaughter
industry. About one out of three cattle slaughter and hog slaughter plants
were audited.
•Plants with customer-hired or plant-hired auditors use significantly higher
levels of foodsafetytechnology than plants without auditors. The most
notable differences between plants using auditors and those not using
auditors were in the use of testing and equipment technologies, and the
smallest differences were observed in sanitation practices. These results
hold within plant size categories.
•The use of double audits may indicate firms with the strongest incentives
to maintain food safety. Double-audit plants—those using both plant-hired
and customer-hired auditors—use greater foodsafetytechnology than
plants using only one audit type (either plant-hired or customer-hired).
These results hold after controlling for plant size.
•Larger plantsandplants owned by multiplant firms are associated with a
significantly higher level of foodsafetytechnologyuse across all indus-
tries that were examined.
How Was the Study Conducted?
Food safetytechnologyusein six categories of meatandpoultry plants—
cattle, hog, andpoultry slaughter; ready-to-eat (e.g., luncheon meats);
not-ready-to-eat (e.g., meat cuts); and ground beef—is examined using a
technology index developed by Ollinger, Moore, and Chandran (2004) and
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Food SafetyAudits,PlantCharacteristics,andFoodSafetyTechnologyUseinMeatandPoultryPlants / EIB-82
Economic Research Service / USDA
using Tukey-Kramer comparison tests and other statistical tools. Six technol-
ogies were examined: hide removal (dehiding), sanitation, operations, equip-
ment, testing, and an overall measure. The data on the use of foodsafety
technologies are nationally representative and include information on 600
slaughter plantsand 700 processing-only meatandpoultryplants collected
by RTI International for USDA’s FoodSafety Inspection Service in 2004 and
2005. They are the most recent data available.
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Economic Research Service / USDA
Introduction
Food safety audits provide information about the efficacy of a plant’s food
safety process control system at some point in time and are becoming
increasingly important to the meatandpoultry industry.
1
Fast food restau-
rants, grocery stores, and other major customers of meatandpoultryplants
use audits to assess the soundness of a plant’s processing operation and often
require audits as conditions for granting a plant their business. Meatand
poultry plantsuse audits as a way to help maintain process control and also
as a marketing tool that could be useful for winning more business (Richard,
2003). By 2005, the use of auditors had become widespread. Some recent
food safety incidents, however, have called into the question the usefulness
of audits. Moss and Martin (2009) and Harris (2010) reported that several
recently audited plants had recalled millions of dollars worth of peanut, meat,
egg, and other products.
The 1993 outbreak of E. coli O157:H7 in hamburgers served at Jack-in-
the-Box restaurants led to a loss in net income for the restaurant company of
around $160 million over the 18 months following the outbreak (Roberts et
al., 1997). In response, Jack-in-the-Box imposed strict foodsafety standards
on its suppliers and became a leader in the provision of foodsafety (Golan
et al., 2004). Other restaurant chains, grocery stores, food manufacturers,
and other buyers also recognized the threat that an adverse foodsafety event
could pose to their business. Thus, they developed their own foodsafety
process control programs and hired foodsafety auditors to evaluate their
effectiveness.
Audits may complement foodsafety technology. While the amount of invest-
ment infoodsafetytechnology indicates a company’s commitment to food
safety and also its capacity to prevent foodborne contamination, foodsafety
audits can indicate how effectively foodsafetytechnology is being used.
To date, there has been little research on the use of audits and their relation-
ship with foodsafetytechnologyinmeatandpoultry plants. Although the
use of auditors does not necessarily cause plants to use more foodsafety
technology or vice versa, an association may exist between the use of audi-
tors andfoodsafety technology, particularly if plants using auditors are the
types of plants that make more extensive use of foodsafety investments or
if the forces encouraging the use of foodsafety auditors encourage the use
of foodsafety technologies. Our purpose in this paper is to (1) examine the
extent of foodsafety audit use, (2) see whether the use of audits varies with
plant size and across industries, and (3) evaluate whether the use of audits,
plant size, and firm type are associated with foodsafetytechnology use.
Our analysis relies on data from a 2004-05 national survey of meatand
poultry plants by RTI International for USDA’s FoodSafety Inspection
Service (FSIS) on the use of foodsafety technologies. Altogether, nearly 400
meat slaughter, more than 200 poultry slaughter, and almost 700 processing-
only plants responded to a survey that was sent to a nationally representa-
tive sample of plants. The survey covered an extensive array of foodsafety
technologies. Some of these are more labor-intensive foodsafety tasks, such
as sanitation practices, and others are fixed assets, such as steam vacuum
1
The terminology surrounding food
safety audits can be confusing. In the
certification literature, a first-party
audit is an audit performed within
the meat or poultryplant by the plant
itself; a second-party audit is an audit
conducted by or on behalf of a purchas-
ing organization, such as a grocery
store chain or another meat or poultry
plant; a third-party audit is undertaken
by an independent certification body
that certifies a process and has no ties
to either the customer or the supplier. In
the trade literature, a third-party auditor
is often referred to as an auditor who
is not an employee of the plant or cus-
tomer. To avoid confusion, we do not
use the first-, second-, and third-party
audit terminology.
2
Food SafetyAudits,PlantCharacteristics,andFoodSafetyTechnologyUseinMeatandPoultryPlants / EIB-82
Economic Research Service / USDA
units. The survey also gathered information on plantcharacteristics, such as
product inputs and outputs, plant size, and firm type.
We measure plantfoodsafetytechnology using an index that is constructed
from the foodsafetytechnology questions included in the RTI International
survey. There is one comprehensive measure of all technologies and separate
indexes for five technology types—hide removal (dehiding), sanitation, oper-
ating practices such as disposal of scrap products (operations), equipment,
and testing. By using five specialized technology indexes that separate labor-
intensive foodsafety activities, such as sanitation, from capital-intensive food
safety measures, such as equipment, we can better understand how types of
technologies vary with plant characteristics. Indexes were based on a more
comprehensive assortment of foodsafety technologies than was available for
Ollinger, Moore, and Chandran (2004).
We next discuss foodsafety audits and then provide an economic framework
of how incentives provided by the private market (e.g., major customers)
encourage food safety. After that, we discuss the survey methodology,
describe the data in more detail, and present results of foodsafety expendi-
tures and technological choices in the context of our model.
[...]... foodsafetytechnology negatively affects Salmonella levels inmeatandpoultry products, suggesting that processors who place a higher value on foodsafety invest more infoodsafetytechnology 10 FoodSafetyAudits,PlantCharacteristics,andFoodSafetyTechnologyUseinMeatandPoultryPlants / EIB-82 Economic Research Service / USDA Survey Techniques and the Data Plant data on self-reported food. .. include meatandpoultry preparation areas It includes cutting, deboning, trimming, grinding, cooking, and other processing areas This step precedes packaging products for the consumer 12 FoodSafetyAudits,PlantCharacteristics,andFoodSafetyTechnologyUseinMeatandPoultryPlants / EIB-82 Economic Research Service / USDA • Equipment use of foodsafety equipment and other technologies in the... double-audit plants may place a stronger emphasis on foodsafety than single-audit plants because both parties (customer and plant) invest in auditor services 6 FoodSafetyAudits,PlantCharacteristics,andFoodSafetyTechnologyUseinMeatandPoultryPlants / EIB-82 Economic Research Service / USDA Economic Framework Plants pay for auditor services, perform cleaning and sanitation tasks, monitor plant. .. implementing foodsafety technologies Firms experience a learning curve when adopting 9 FoodSafetyAudits,PlantCharacteristics,andFoodSafetyTechnologyUseinMeatandPoultryPlants / EIB-82 Economic Research Service / USDA more advanced technology, enabling multiplant firms to install and implement new technologies in other plants at a lower cost after they have already used it in one plant This... they minimize their costs under the constraints of making the foodsafety investments and using the auditor services that their markets demand FoodSafetyTechnologyand Auditor UseandPlant Size Cost minimizing behavior, different types of plant production technologies, and the foodsafety investments that plants must make to meet market demands suggests that plant- level foodsafetytechnology use. .. a no-audit plant of a similar size Economic theory suggests that if a plant values foodsafety higher, then it will invest more infood safety, suggesting an association between auditor useandfoodsafetytechnology use. 7 Thus, we expect foodsafetytechnology levels to be higher for double-audit plants than for singleaudit plantsand for audit plants than for no-audit plants 7Ollinger and Moore (2009)... pound (assumed squab) 1 Slaughter industries includes plants that only slaughter plants (i.e., slaughter-only plants) andplants that both slaughter animals and process raw meat RTE=Ready To Eat NRTE=Not Ready To Eat Source: USDA, Economic Research Service and RTI calculations 14 FoodSafetyAudits,PlantCharacteristics,andFoodSafetyTechnologyUseinMeatandPoultryPlants / EIB-82 Economic Research... technology index for plantsin the top quintile was significantly larger (p . place a higher value on food safety invest more in food safety technology. 11 Food Safety Audits, Plant Characteristics, and Food Safety Technology Use in Meat and Poultry Plants / EIB-82 Economic. examined using a technology index developed by Ollinger, Moore, and Chandran (2004) and v Food Safety Audits, Plant Characteristics, and Food Safety Technology Use in Meat and Poultry Plants / EIB-82 Economic. Service Economic Information Bulletin Number 82 October 2011 Food Safety Audits, Plant Characteristics, and Food Safety Technology Use in Meat and Poultry Plants Abstract Food safety technology can increase