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Supplying Principles and Practices > USPS Supplying Practices Process Step 2: Evaluate Sources > Evaluate Foreign and Domestic Proposals
Evaluate Foreign and Domestic Proposals
Proposals offering other than domestic end products or (subject to the
eligibility thresholds set out below in Figure 2.14) end products mined,
produced, or manufactured in (i) countries that have entered into World Trade
Organization Government Procurement Agreement (WTO GPA) or (ii) a
country that has entered into a Free Trade Agreement (FTA) with the United
States covering government purchases, will be evaluated in one of two ways
against proposals of relatively equal value offering domestic end products or
eligible WTO GPA or FTA country end products. This evaluation will depend
on whether contract award will be based on price or on evaluation factors
other than price. When an award will be based on price, a six percent
differential is applied to the proposed price of the non-qualifying end product,
and this adjusted price is used by the Proposal Evaluation Team and the
Contracting Officer in the course of evaluation. If proposal evaluation factors
will have a significant weight in proposal evaluation, domestic and WTO GPA
or FTA end products will receive a preference in the case of closely ranked
proposals, but no price differential will be applied.
A domestic end product is:
1. An unmanufactured end product mined or produced in the United
States; or
2. An end product manufactured in the United States, if the cost of its
components mined, produced, or manufactured in the United States
exceeds fifty percent of the cost of all its components. Components
(i.e., articles, materials, supply incorporated directly into an end product
or construction material) of foreign origin of the same class or kind as
those that the Postal Service determines are not mined, produced, or
manufactured in sufficient and reasonably available commercial
quantities of a satisfactory quality are treated as domestic. Scrap
generated, collected, and prepared for processing in the United States
is considered domestic. Cost of components refers to:
• For components purchased by the Supplier, the purchase cost,
including transportation costs to the place of incorporation into the
end product or construction material (whether or not such costs
are paid to a domestic firm), and any applicable duty (whether or
not a duty-free entry certificate is issued); or
• For components manufactured by the Supplier, all costs
associated with the manufacture of the component, including
transportation costs as described above, plus allocable overhead
costs, but excluding profit. Cost of components does not include
any costs associated with the manufacture of the end product.
When a request for proposals (RFP) specifies that an award will be made on
a group of line items, a domestic proposal means a proposal where the
proposed price of the domestic end products exceeds fifty percent of the total
proposed price of the group.
End products from a designated WTO GPA or FTA country are those articles,
materials, and supplies that:
1. Are wholly the growth, product, or manufacture of producers in (i)
countries that have entered into World Trade Organization Government
Procurement Agreement (WTO GPA) or (ii) a country that has entered
into a Free Trade Agreement (FTA) with the United States covering
government purchasing; or
2. In the case of articles that consist in whole or in part of materials from
another country, have been substantially transformed in a WTO GPA or
FTA country into new and different articles of commerce with names,
characters, or uses distinct from that of the article or articles from which
they were transformed.
An end product refers to a product offered for purchase under a supply
contract, but for purposes of calculating the value of the end product,
includes services (except transportation services) incidental to the article,
provided that the value of those incidental services do not exceed that of the
article itself.
The following are the designated WTO GPA and FTA countries:
• WTO GPA countries: Aruba, Austria, Belgium, Canada, Cyprus,
Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany,
Greece, Hong Kong, Hungary, Iceland, Ireland, Israel, Italy,
Japan, Korea (Republic of), Latvia, Liechtenstein, Lithuania,
Luxembourg, Malta, Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Portugal,
Singapore, Slovak Republic, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden,
Switzerland, and United Kingdom; construction materials and end
products granted duty-free entry: Antigua and Barbuda, The
Bahamas, Barbados, Belize, Costa Rica, Dominica, Dominican
Republic, El Salvador, Grenada, Guatemala, Haiti, Honduras,
Jamaica, Montserrat, Netherlands Antilles, Saint
Christopher-Nevis, Saint Lucia, Saint Vincent and the
Grenadines, Trinidad and Tobago, and Virgin Islands (British)
• FTA countries: Australia, Canada, Chile, Israel, Mexico,
Morocco, and Singapore
The value of the purchase and the type of commodity being purchased are
determining factors as to whether the WTO GTA and FTA products may be
considered domestic-source end products. The thresholds are summarized in
the table below. Estimated contract value includes the value of any
contemplated options.
Figure 2.14
Eligibility Thresholds
Trade Agreement
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Supply Contract (Equal
to or Exceeding)
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Service Contract
(Equal to or Exceeding)
|
Construction Contract
(Equal to or Exceeding)
|
WTO GPA
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$175,000
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$175,000
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$6,725,000
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NAFTA - Canada
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$25,000
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$58,500
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$7,611,532
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NAFTA - Mexico
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$58,500
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$58,500
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$7,611,532
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Chile FTA
|
$58,500
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$58,500
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$6,725,000
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Singapore FTA
|
$58,500
|
$58,500
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$6,725,000
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Australia FTA
|
$58,500
|
$58,500
|
$6,725,000
|
Morocco FTA
|
$175,000
|
$175,000
|
$6,725,000
|
Israeli Trade Act
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$50,000
|
-
|
-
|
When proposals contain end products produced in eligible designated WTO
GPA and FTA countries, and the value of the purchase exceeds the amount
shown above, the end products are considered as domestic-source end
products.
To determine whether the purchase of products by lease, rental, or
lease-purchase contract (including lease-to-ownership, or
lease-with-option-to purchase) is covered by the WTO GPA or an FTA,
calculate the estimated purchase value as follows:
• If a fixed-term contract of 12 months or less is contemplated, use
the total estimated value of the purchase
• If a fixed-term contract of more than 12 months is contemplated,
use the total estimated value of the purchase plus the estimated
residual value of the leased equipment at the conclusion of the
contemplated term of the contract
• If an indefinite delivery contract is contemplated, use the
estimated monthly payment multiplied by the total number of
months that ordering would be possible under the proposed
contract (i.e., the initial ordering period plus any optional ordering
periods)
• If there is any doubt as to the contemplated term of the contract,
use the estimated monthly payment multiplied by 48
Purchases of the following services are excluded from coverage as indicated
in the table below:
Figure 2.15
Excluded Purchases
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Service
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WTO GPA
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NAFTA
(Mexico and
Canada) and
Chile FTA
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Singapore
FTA
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Australia
and
Morocco
FTA
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(1i)
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Automatic Data Processing (ADP)
telecommunications and transmission
services, except advanced (i.e.,
value-added) telecommunications
services.
|
Excluded
|
Excluded
|
Excluded
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Excluded
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(1ii)
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ADP teleprocessing and timesharing
services, telecommunications network
management services, automated news
services, data services or other
information services, and other ADP and
telecommunications services
|
Excluded
|
Excluded
|
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(1iii)
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Basic telecommunications network
services (i.e., voice telephone services,
packet-switched data transmission
services, circuit-switched data
transmission services, telex services,
telegraph services, facsimile services,
and private leased circuit services, but
not information services as defined in 47
U.S.C. 153(20)).
|
Excluded
(subset of
services
listed
under (1i)
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Excluded
(subset of
services
listed under
(1i)
|
Excluded
|
Excluded
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(2)
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Dredging
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Excluded
|
Excluded
|
Excluded
|
Excluded
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(3i)
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Operation and management contracts of
certain Government facilities and
privately owned facilities for Government
purposes, including Federally Funded
Research and Development Centers.
|
Excluded
|
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Excluded
|
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(3ii)
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Operation of Government-owned
research and development facilities or
Government-owned environmental
laboratories.
|
Excluded
(subset of
services
listed
under (3i)
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Excluded
|
Excluded
(subset of
services
listed
under (3i)
|
Excluded
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(4)
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Research and development.
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Excluded
|
Excluded
|
Excluded
|
Excluded
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(5)
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Transportation services (including
launching services, but not including
travel agent services).
|
Excluded
|
Excluded
|
Excluded
|
Excluded
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(6)
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Utility services.
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Excluded
|
Excluded
|
Excluded
|
Excluded
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(7)
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Maintenance, repair, modification,
rebuilding, and installation of equipment
related to ships.
|
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Excluded
|
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(8)
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Non-nuclear ship repair.
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Excluded
|
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Excluded
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Construction Materials
The procedures in this part apply to all construction contracts. Deviations
may be authorized by the Vice President, Supply Management (VP, SM). For
the purposes of this practice, the following definitions apply:
• Construction material components are articles, materials, and
supplies incorporated directly into construction materials.
• Construction materials are articles, materials, and supplies
brought to the construction site for incorporation into the building
or work.
• Domestic construction material is (1) an unmanufactured
construction material mined or produced in the United States, or
(2) a construction material manufactured in the United States, if
the cost of its components mined, produced, or manufactured in
the United States exceeds fifty percent of the cost of all its
components. The cost of each component includes transportation
costs to the place of incorporation into the construction material
and any applicable duty (whether or not a duty-free entry
certificate is issued). Components of foreign origin of the same
class or kind as those listed in Non-Available Products
(subsection to this practices) are treated as domestic.
• Foreign construction material is a construction material other than
a domestic construction material.
Only domestic construction materials may be used in construction, except:
• When the Contracting Officer determines that use of a particular
domestic construction material would be impracticable, or that its
cost would be unreasonable, under guidelines established by the
VP, Supply Management, in the relevant handbook
• When the VP, SM, determines that a construction material is not
mined, produced, or manufactured in the United States in
sufficient and reasonably available commercial quantities of
satisfactory quality (see Non-Available Products)
Provision 1-3: Domestic Source Certificate - Construction Materials is
incorporated by reference in Provision 4-3, and must be checked-off by
Contracting Officers when the request for proposals (RFP) calls for the
purchase of construction materials. Clause 1-10: Preference for Domestic
Construction Materials is incorporated by reference in Clause 4-2, and must
be checked-off by Contracting Officers when the contract calls for the
purchase of construction materials.
This practice does not apply to products set out in the list of Non-Available
Products below or to purchases as to which the Vice President, Supply
Management (VP, SM), has determined that the application of a domestic
preference would be inconsistent with the public interest.
Non-Available Products
Acetylene, black.
Agar, bulk.
Anise.
Antimony, as metal or oxide.
Asbestos, amosite, chrysotile, and crocidolite.
Bamboo shoots.
Bananas.
Bauxite.
Beef, corned, canned.
Beef extract.
Bephenium hydroxynapthoate.
Bismuth.
Books, trade, text, technical, or scientific; newspapers; pamphlets;
magazines; periodicals; printed briefs and films; not printed in the United
States and for which domestic editions are not available.
Brazil nuts, unroasted.
Cadmium, ores and flue dust.
Calcium cyanamide.
Capers.
Cashew nuts.
Castor beans and castor oil.
Chalk, English.
Chestnuts.
Chicle.
Chrome ore or chromite.
Cinchona bark.
Cobalt, in cathodes, rondelles, or other primary ore and metal forms.
Cocoa beans.
Coconut and coconut meat, unsweetened, in shredded, desiccated, or
similarly prepared form.
Coffee, raw or green bean.
Colchicine alkaloid, raw.
Copra.
Cork, wood or bark and waste.
Cover glass, microscope slide.
Crane rail (85-pound per foot).
Cryolite, natural.
Dammar gum.
Diamonds, industrial, stones and abrasives.
Emetine, bulk.
Ergot, crude.
Erythrityl tetranitrate.
Fair linen, altar.
Fibers of the following types: abaca, abace, agave, coir, flax, jute, jute
burlaps, palmyra, and sisal.
Goat and kidskins.
Goat hair canvas.
Grapefruit sections, canned.
Graphite, natural, crystalline, crucible grade.
Hand file sets (Swiss pattern).
Handsewing needles.
Hemp yarn.
Hog bristles for brushes.
Hyoscine, bulk.
Ipecac, root.
Iodine, crude.
Kaurigum.
Lac.
Leather, sheepskin, hair type.
Lavender oil.
Manganese.
Menthol, natural bulk.
Mica.
Microprocessor chips (brought onto a government construction site as
separate units for incorporation into building systems during construction or
repair and alteration of real property).
Modacrylic fur ruff.
Nickel, primary, in ingots, pigs, shots, cathodes, or similar forms; nickel oxide
and nickel salts.
Nitroguanidine (also known as picrite).
Nux vomica, crude.
Oiticica oil.
Olive oil.
Olives (green), pitted or unpitted, or stuffed, in bulk.
Opium, crude.
Oranges, mandarin, canned.
Petroleum, crude oil, unfinished oils, and finished products.
Pine needle oil.
Platinum and related group metals, refined, as sponge, powder, ingots, or
cast bars.
Pyrethrum flowers.
Quartz crystals.
Quebracho.
Quinidine.
Quinine.
Rabbit fur felt.
Radium salts, source and special nuclear materials.
Rosettes.
Rubber, crude and latex.
Rutile.
Santonin, crude.
Secretin.
Shellac.
Silk, raw and unmanufactured.
Spare and replacement parts for equipment of foreign manufacture, and for
which domestic parts are not available.
Spices and herbs, in bulk.
Sugars, raw.
Swords and scabbards.
Talc, block, steatite.
Tantalum.
Tapioca flour and cassava.
Tartar, crude; tartaric acid and cream of tartar in bulk.
Tea in bulk.
Thread, metallic (gold).
Thyme oil.
Tin in bars, blocks, and pigs.
Triprolidine hydrochloride.
Tungsten.
Vanilla beans.
Venom, cobra.
Water chestnuts.
Wax, carnauba.
Wire glass.
Woods; logs, veneer, and lumber of the following species: Alaskan yellow
cedar, angelique, balsa, ekki, greenheart, lignum vitae, mahogany, and teak.
Yarn, 50 Denier rayon.
Conduct Market Research and Benchmarking Analysis topic, Decide on
Make vs. Buy task, Process Step 1: Identify Needs
Review and Finalize Request for Proposals (RFP) topic, Perform
Solicitation-Related Activities task, Process Step 2: Evaluate Sources
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