Keywords: Food safety, foodborne illness, microbial pathogens, meat and poultry
inspection, HACCP, cost of illness, consumer education, irradiation
1301 New York Ave NW.
Washington, DC 20005-4788
July 1997
Economic Research Service/USDA
An Economic Assessment of Food Safety Regulations
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Contents
Summary ............................................................................................................. iii
Introduction and Overview .................................................................................... 1
The Economics of Food Safety ............................................................................. 1
The Scope and Extent of Pathogen-Related Foodborne Disease ............ 2
Options for Improving Meat and Poultry Safety ........................................ 5
Historical Background ........................................................................................... 5
U.S. Meat and Poultry Inspection Before 1996 ........................................ 5
The Hazard Analysis and Critical Control Points Regulatory System ....... 7
HACCP Plans .................................................................................... 7
Sanitation Standard Operating Procedures ....................................... 7
Testing for
Salmonella ....................................................................... 7
Testing for
E. coli .............................................................................. 7
Enforcement Strategies ..................................................................... 8
An Economic Assessment of HACCP Regulations ............................................... 8
Benefits of the HACCP Rule .................................................................... 8
Effectiveness of HACCP Rule in Reducing Pathogens ..................... 9
The Relationship Between Pathogen Reduction and the
Level of Foodborne Illness .......................................................... 9
The Discount Rate Used to Estimate the Present Value of
Benefits and the Timing of Benefits ............................................ 9
Methodology Used to Measure Benefits of Reduced
Foodborne Illness ....................................................................... 9
Baseline: Costs of Foodborne Illnesses .......................................... 10
Benefit Estimation ........................................................................... 11
Costs of HACCP Rule ............................................................................ 11
Comparison of Benefits and Costs ........................................................ 15
Alternatives to Regulation ................................................................................... 15
Education About and Promotion of Safe Food Handling by
Consumers, Retailers, and Foodservice Workers ............................ 15
Irradiation of Meat and Poultry Products ................................................ 17
Market-Oriented Approaches to Food Safety: Economic Incentives ...... 18
Conclusions and Suggestions for Further Research ........................................... 19
References ......................................................................................................... 19
Summary
This economic analysis of new meat and poultry inspection rules evaluates the ben-
efits and costs of reducing microbial pathogens and preventing foodborne illness.
USDA is now requiring all federally-inspected meat and poultry processing plants to
implement a new inspection system called Hazard Analysis and Critical Control Points
(HACCP). This system strives to reduce human exposure to meat- and poultry-borne
pathogens by requiring processing plants to scrutinize the critical control points in the
production process—points where food safety hazards can be prevented, reduced to
an acceptable level, or eliminated.
Efforts to improve the U.S. meat and poultry inspection system were spurred in part by
recent outbreaks of illness traced to
E. coli bacteria in beef products. According to the
U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Food and Drug Administra-
tion, between 6 and 33 million people become ill each year from microbial pathogens
in food, including meat and poultry, resulting in as many as 9,000 deaths.
The key economic benefit of HACCP is the money saved by reducing foodborne
illnesses. Society incurs medical costs and productivity losses when people need
medical care, miss work, or die prematurely from illnesses caused by microbial
pathogens in their food. ERS research has estimated the annual medical and produc-
tivity costs of seven major pathogens in meat and poultry products to be between $6.5
and $34.9 billion annually.
The key costs of HACCP include spending by meat and poultry processing plants on
such things as sanitation, temperature control, planning and training, and pathogen
testing. USDA’s Food Safety and Inspection Service estimates these costs to be from
$1.1 to $1.3 billion over 20 years.
The report finds that the benefits of HACCP will likely outweigh the costs. Using
conservative assumptions that HACCP reduces both pathogen levels and foodborne
illnesses and deaths by 20 percent, the benefits of the new inspection system are at
least $1.9 billion over 20 years. This exceeds the 20-year estimated cost of the
program, which FSIS puts at $1.1 to $1.3 billion. If implementation of HACCP reduces
pathogen contamination by 90 percent, the expected reductions in medical costs and
productivity losses climb to as much as $170 billion. These estimates are conserva-
tive, because they encompass foodborne diseases from four pathogens for which
epidemiological and cost-of-illness data exist. HACCP implementation could produce
additional economic benefits by controlling other pathogens.
HACCP will likely affect some groups more than others—in terms of both benefits and
costs. For instance, certain high-risk population groups—including the elderly, the very
young, pregnant women, and people with HIV/AIDS or cancer—will benefit more from
improved food safety than others because they are more likely to contract foodborne
illnesses. On the other hand, the costs of implementing HACCP may be proportionally
greater for small processing plants.
Strengthening the meat inspection system is one of several actions that can improve
the safety of the Nation’s meat and poultry supplies. Others include promoting the safe
handling of meat and poultry by consumers, retailers, and foodservice workers and
educating them how to do so; irradiating meat and poultry products; and strengthening
economic incentives to produce safer food by certifying production processes that
significantly reduce pathogens, or by increasing the legal options available to those
stricken with foodborne illnesses.
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An Economic Assessment of Food Safety Regulations
Economic Research Service/USDA
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Economic Research Service/USDA
An Economic Assessment of Food Safety Regulations
and parasites that can cause human illness if not killed
by thorough cooking. Residues of agricultural chemicals
may remain on fruits and vegetables, and prolonged
dietary exposure to such chemicals may pose a risk of
cancer or other adverse health effects. Chemical
residues from fertilizers and pesticides applied to crop-
land may end up in drinking water supplies, again
exposing consumers to potentially hazardous chemicals.
Finally, microbial pathogens may enter streams and
human water supplies through feedlot or pasture runoff.
Consumers make choices about the food products they
purchase based on a number of factors. In addition to
the price of the product, factors such as appearance,
convenience, texture, smell, and perceived quality
influence choices made in the marketplace. In an ideal
world, consumers would make consumption decisions
with full information about product attributes, and so
choose the foods that maximize their well-being.
In the real world, however, there are numerous food-
safety information problems, which complicate the
consumer’s decisionmaking. All raw meat and poultry
products contain some level of microorganisms, some of
which may be pathogens (bacteria, parasites, viruses, or
fungi that can cause illness in humans). However,
consumers generally do not know the level of foodborne-
illness risk, since pathogens are not visible to the naked
eye. Aside from some rather obvious indications (
e.g.,
unpleasant odor, or discoloration, both of which are more
likely to be caused by non-pathogenic spoilage microor-
ganisms), there are, in many cases, no clear-cut ways
for consumers to determine if there is a health risk from
pathogens or other causes (such as pesticide residues).
Firms may also be reluctant to link food safety issues
and their products in the minds of consumers.
Consumers do not have complete information about the
safety of the products they buy because producers have
no direct incentive to provide this information. Since it is
not clear whether consumers can distinguish different
safety levels in food products, firms may not wish to incur
the extra cost of providing more than the minimum
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