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A domestic end product is as follows:
- An unmanufactured end product mined or produced in the U.S. or
- An end product manufactured in the U.S., if the cost of its components mined, produced, or manufactured in the U.S. exceeds fifty percent of the cost of all its components. Components (i.e., articles, materials, supplies 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. This component test is waived for the purchase of commercial-off-the-shelf (COTS) items. Scrap generated, collected, and prepared for processing in the U.S. is considered domestic. Cost of components refers to:
When an 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.
Provision 1-2: Domestic Source Certificate —Supplies must be included in all solicitations when the RFP calls for the purchase of supplies; and, Clause 1-9: Preference for Domestic Supplies must be included or incorporated by reference in Clause 4-2: Contract Terms and Conditions Required to Implement Policies, Statutes or Executive Orders when the contract calls for the purchase of supplies.
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