Biden pushes government to buy American
Feds spend about $800B each year on contracts
WASHINGTON – President Joe Biden will take steps Monday to encourage the federal government to buy more American-made products, a move the new administration argued will protect U.S. jobs and juice an economy severely hobbled by the coronavirus pandemic.
Biden, who pushed a $700 billion Buy American campaign as a candidate for president, is set to sign an executive order that will advance several policies to boost the federal government’s purchase of U.S.-manufactured goods and services, administration officials said Sunday.
Federal law requires government agencies to give preference to American firms when possible, but critics said those requirements haven’t always been implemented consistently or effectively. Some have not been substantially updated since the 1950s.
The federal government spends nearly $600 billion a year on contracts, which is money the administration said can spur a revitalization of the nation’s industrial strength and create new markets for new technologies.
To that end, Biden’s order will increase the domestic content threshold, which is the amount of a product that must be made in the U.S. before it can be purchased by the federal government.
Right now, loopholes in federal law allow products to be stamped “made in America” for purposes of federal procurement, even if barely 51% of the materials used to produce them are domestically made. Administration officials did not say how much Biden intends to increase that threshold.
In addition, the order will close loopholes that critics said federal agencies often use to get around requirements that they buy American products.
The order called for a central review of requests for waivers to Buy American rules and the creation of a website that will be available to the public. U.S. manufacturers will be able to see those waivers and determine whether they are in a position to provide the requested goods. That will help more American companies compete for and win federal contracts, an administration official said.
The order also will create a senior director’s position in the Office of Management and Budget whose focus will be on the Made In America campaign and making sure the new rules and procedures are followed.
Federal agencies will be directed to use the Manufacturing Extension Partnership, a public-private network that supports small and midsize businesses in all 50 states and Puerto Rico, to help agencies connect with new domestic suppliers who can make the products they need while employing U.S. workers.
Shortly after taking office in 2017, President Donald Trump issued a series of executive orders that were intended to strengthen rules requiring federal agencies to buy U.S.made goods when possible. But critics argued that effort fell short, partly because of Trump’s inability to adequately enforce the rules.
The order that Biden will sign is expected to include a clear timeline for updating domestic content requirements and a process for reducing unnecessary waivers, which the administration argued would fundamentally change how the program operates.
Agencies will be required to report twice a year on their implementation of Made in America laws.
Since taking office last Wednesday, Biden has signed more than two dozen executive orders spanning a variety of subjects, including COVID-19 and food assistance for low-income families.