Department of Agriculture's Beef Grading

Accuracy and Uniformity Need To Be Improved Gao ID: CED-78-141 July 21, 1978

Beef grading provides a basis for price quotations among feeders, packers, suppliers, retailers, and others along the marketing chain and a system for consumers to show their preferences.

In 29 slaughter plants visited by GAO, 21 percent of 2,215 carcasses were misgraded, and most errors involved overgrading. Beef grading was not consistent from one section of the country to another. More accurate measurements of beef carcass characteristics are needed to correct problems resulting from the subjective nature of grading. Grading inaccuracy has also resulted from management problems. For example: a standard for grading accuracy has not been established, stations varied in methods of improving grader performance, supervisors did not always follow grader monitoring procedures, grading took place under conditions which increased the likelihood of errors, and packers used an informal complaint system rather than a formal process for resolving disputed grades--this could result in harassment of graders. The current grade standards do not fully meet the needs of the beef industry or of consumers. Value differences are not always clear and, because beef sold at retail is not always marked with an official grade, beef can be represented as being of a better quality than it actually is.

Recommendations

Our recommendations from this work are listed below with a Contact for more information. Status will change from "In process" to "Open," "Closed - implemented," or "Closed - not implemented" based on our follow up work.

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