[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 48, Volume 1]
[Revised as of October 1, 2002]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 48CFR15.407-2]

[Page 276-277]
 
            TITLE 48--FEDERAL ACQUISITION REGULATIONS SYSTEM
 
                CHAPTER 1--FEDERAL ACQUISITION REGULATION
 
PART 15--CONTRACTING BY NEGOTIATION--Table of Contents
 
                     Subpart 15.4--Contract Pricing
 
Sec. 15.407-2  Make-or-buy programs.

    (a) General. The prime contractor is responsible for managing 
contract performance, including planning, placing, and administering 
subcontracts as necessary to ensure the lowest overall cost and 
technical risk to the Government. When make-or-buy programs are 
required, the Government may reserve the right to review and agree on 
the contractor's make-or-buy program when necessary to ensure 
negotiation of reasonable contract prices, satisfactory performance, or 
implementation of socioeconomic policies. Consent to subcontracts and 
review of contractors' purchasing systems are separate actions covered 
in part 44.
    (b) Definition. Make item, as used in this subsection, means an item 
or work effort to be produced or performed by the prime contractor or 
its affiliates, subsidiaries, or divisions.
    (c) Acquisitions requiring make-or-buy programs. (1) Contracting 
officers may require prospective contractors to submit make-or-buy 
program plans for negotiated acquisitions requiring cost or pricing data 
whose estimated value is $10 million or more, except when the proposed 
contract is for research or development and, if prototypes or hardware 
are involved, no significant follow-on production is anticipated.
    (2) Contracting officers may require prospective contractors to 
submit make-or-buy programs for negotiated acquisitions whose estimated 
value is under $10 million only if the contracting officer--
    (i) Determines that the information is necessary; and
    (ii) Documents the reasons in the contract file.
    (d) Solicitation requirements. When prospective contractors are 
required to submit proposed make-or-buy programs, the solicitation shall 
include--
    (1) A statement that the program and required supporting information 
must accompany the offer; and
    (2) A description of factors to be used in evaluating the proposed 
program, such as capability, capacity, availability of small, small 
disadvantaged, and women-owned small business concerns for 
subcontracting, establishment of new facilities in or near labor surplus 
areas, delivery or performance schedules, control of technical and 
schedule interfaces, proprietary processes, technical superiority or 
exclusiveness, and technical risks involved.
    (e) Program requirements. To support a make-or-buy program, the 
following information shall be supplied by the contractor in its 
proposal:
    (1) Items and work included. The information required from a 
contractor in a make-or-buy program shall be confined to those major 
items or work efforts that normally would require company management 
review of the make-or-buy decision because they are complex, costly, 
needed in large quantities, or require additional facilities to produce. 
Raw materials, commercial items (see 2.101), and off-the-shelf items 
(see 46.101) shall not be included, unless their potential impact on 
contract cost or schedule is critical. Normally, make-or-buy programs 
should not include items or work efforts estimated to cost less than 1 
percent of the total estimated contract price or any minimum dollar 
amount set by the agency.
    (2) The offeror's program should include or be supported by the 
following information:

[[Page 277]]

    (i) A description of each major item or work effort.
    (ii) Categorization of each major item or work effort as ``must 
make,'' ``must buy, or ``can either make or buy.''
    (iii) For each item or work effort categorized as ``can either make 
or buy,'' a proposal either to ``make'' or to ``buy.''
    (iv) Reasons for categorizing items and work efforts as ``must 
make'' or ``must buy,'' and proposing to ``make'' or to ``buy'' those 
categorized as ``can either make or buy.'' The reasons must include the 
consideration given to the evaluation factors described in the 
solicitation and must be in sufficient detail to permit the contracting 
officer to evaluate the categorization or proposal.
    (v) Designation of the plant or division proposed to make each item 
or perform each work effort, and a statement as to whether the existing 
or proposed new facility is in or near a labor surplus area.
    (vi) Identification of proposed subcontractors, if known, and their 
location and size status (also see Subpart 19.7 for subcontracting plan 
requirements).
    (vii) Any recommendations to defer make-or-buy decisions when 
categorization of some items or work efforts is impracticable at the 
time of submission.
    (viii) Any other information the contracting officer requires in 
order to evaluate the program.
    (f) Evaluation, negotiation, and agreement. Contracting officers 
shall evaluate and negotiate proposed make-or-buy programs as soon as 
practicable after their receipt and before contract award.
    (1) When the program is to be incorporated in the contract and the 
design status of the product being acquired does not permit accurate 
precontract identification of major items or work efforts, the 
contracting officer shall notify the prospective contractor in writing 
that these items or efforts, when identifiable, shall be added under the 
clause at 52.215-9, Changes or Additions to Make-or-Buy Program.
    (2) Contracting officers normally shall not agree to proposed ``make 
items'' when the products or services are not regularly manufactured or 
provided by the contractor and are available--quality, quantity, 
delivery, and other essential factors considered--from another firm at 
equal or lower prices, or when they are regularly manufactured or 
provided by the contractor, but are available--quality, quantity, 
delivery, and other essential factors considered-- from another firm at 
lower prices. However, the contracting officer may agree to these as 
``make items'' if an overall lower Governmentwide cost would result or 
it is otherwise in the best interest of the Government. If this 
situation occurs in any fixed-price incentive or cost-plus-incentive-fee 
contract, the contracting officer shall specify these items in the 
contract and state that they are subject to paragraph (d) of the clause 
at 52.215-9, Changes or Additions to Make-or-Buy Program (see 
15.408(a)). If the contractor proposes to reverse the categorization of 
such items during contract performance, the contract price shall be 
subject to equitable reduction.
    (g) Incorporating make-or-buy programs in contracts. The contracting 
officer may incorporate the make-or-buy program in negotiated contracts 
for--
    (1) Major systems (see part 34) or their subsystems or components, 
regardless of contract type; or
    (2) Other supplies and services if--
    (i) The contract is a cost-reimbursable contract, or a cost-sharing 
contract in which the contractor's share of the cost is less than 25 
percent; and
    (ii) The contracting officer determines that technical or cost risks 
justify Government review and approval of changes or additions to the 
make-or-buy program.

[62 FR 51230, Sept. 30, 1997, as amended at 66 FR 2129, Jan. 10, 2001]