Biden's 'Buy American' Promise Is a Lot More Complicated and Bureaucratic Than It Seems
An escalator in a subway station is considered a "component" but a fire suppression system in the same station is considered a "finished product." Why? Because the bureaucrats say so.

On the surface, it might appear that so-called "Buy American" rules, like the ones President Joe Biden has promised to tighten as part of a push to promote domestic manufacturing, are pretty straightforward.
A product either comes with a "Made in the USA" sticker or it doesn't, right?
Unfortunately, it's not that simple. To qualify under federal "Made in America" rules, a product must have at least 60 percent of its component parts manufactured in the United States. The Biden administration raised the threshold from 55 percent last year, and further increases—up to 75 percent by 2029—have been outlined by the White House.
But what counts as a finished product or a component part is open to interpretation—and the process is time-consuming, bureaucratic, and full of opportunities for domestic companies to leverage the power of the federal government against potential competitors.
Take for example what happened when the Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA), which operates the subway systems and other forms of mass transit in New York City, tried to buy a fire-suppression system from Finland in 2011. At the time, the MTA was in the process of building a new subway line under Second Avenue in Manhattan. Because the project was partially funded with federal dollars, the federal "Buy American" mandate applied.
By that point, the MTA had already gone through several rounds of bureaucratic approvals over the construction of the station. In 2010, for example, the agency had asked the Federal Transit Administration (FTA) to clarify whether an escalator in one of the stations on the new line was a "manufactured end product" or a component of the larger station project. The FTA responded by saying that the "escalator was a component of the larger transit facility and that the transit facility was the manufactured end product." As long as the whole facility was comprised of 55 percent American-made components, it would be compliant with the law.
Using that same logic, the MTA assumed that the fire suppression system—which, like an escalator, is both full of component parts and a component within the transit facility—could be treated as a part of the whole.
Not so fast. In 2013, Securiplex, a company that manufactures fire-suppression systems, asked the FTA to launch an investigation into whether the MTA had violated the "Buy American" rules by purchasing the Finland-made system from the Marioff Corporation, one of Securiplex's competitors.
It took more than a year for the FTA to make a decision, but it ultimately ruled that the Marioff system was not compliant. "MTA must acquire water mist fire suppression systems that consist of components manufactured in the United States," the agency told the MTA in a January 2015 letter.
Dana Nifosi, then-acting chief counsel for the FTA, claimed in the letter that the MTA's "good faith" analogy with the escalators was "taken out of context." An escalator or elevator is "interrelated to and incorporated into the physical structure of the facility, and therefore, functions more like a component of the facility," but a fire-suppression system is "a comprehensive system that functions more like a manufactured end product," Nifosi wrote.
Maybe you think the FTA's logic holds water, or maybe it seems like a bunch of nonsense. That doesn't really matter. Either way, the situation illustrates an unappreciated problem with the "Buy American" rules that both drive up costs and slow down the process of building infrastructure in the United States.
"Compliance with Buy America requirements is often not straightforward," explained the Congressional Research Service in a 2019 report that highlighted the MTA's struggles with the mandate a few years earlier. Disagreements over whether a particular item is "an end product, a component, or a subcomponent" often lead to delays in federal transportation projects, the report found.
That same problem is now affecting projects funded by the $1.2 trillion federal infrastructure bill that Biden signed last year. Earlier this month, the U.S. Department of Transportation blocked an attempt by some U.S. ports to use a portion of that funding to buy new dock cranes, trucks, and boat lifts from foreign manufacturers, The Washington Post reported last week. The American Association of Port Authorities argues that the only heavy equipment that will comply with another Biden administration mandate—one that requires all new equipment purchased with infrastructure bill funded to be electric, rather than gasoline-powered—is manufactured overseas.
So the question is essentially the same as the one that faced the FTA and MTA several years ago. Is the port the end product, with cranes, trucks, and lifts as component parts? Or do each of those things count as their own end products? If the Department of Transportation sticks to the latter interpretation, ports might be unable to use federal funding to upgrade their equipment—an outcome that would slow, rather than improve, supply chains.
It goes to show that higher costs are just one of the ways that "Buy American" mandates kneecap federal infrastructure spending. If you want something done quickly, don't empower the bureaucrats. Unfortunately, that's exactly what Biden is doing.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
Hey Reason, wait'll you get a load of "navigable waters".
Oh, what joy! I've had to deal with that crap a few times. It's fun when you get an intermittent wetland, and somehow, that becomes "waters of the United States" for some bullshit ACE reason.
Great article, Mike. I appreciate your work, I’m now creating over $35,000 dollars each month simply by doing a simple job online! I do know You currently making a lot of greenbacks online from $28,000 dollars, its simple online operating jobs.
.
.
Just open the link———————————————>>> http://Www.JobsRevenue.Com
Unelected leftist technocrats writing convoluted, confusing laws?
This is my shocked face:
The cost adder for just the documentation is atrocious. One vendor, for a freaking steel bolt, charges $100. If you buy many bolts, it is still $100. If you need just a few more, FFS.
My Companion mother makes 50 bucks an hour on the PC(Personal Computer). She has been out of w0rk for quite some time red however last month her check was 11k bucks only w0rking on the PC(Personal Computer) for 9 hours per day.
For more detail visit this article………….>>> http://www.jobsrevenue.com
Well the bots here don't seem to be made in the USA.
Yeah, actually, I'm in favor of this. The harder it is for local governments to spend Federal infrastructure dollars, the less of my tax money gets spent on that nonsense. Let local governments get frustrated to the point where they don't even try applying for Uncle Sugar money, but just figure out how to meet local needs out of their own local budgets.
It’s going to get spent eventually. No one will pass up this funding, to any degree.
A bit short sided. They spend them anyway. Just not with any efficiency.
Ask me how I know.
You're a dreamer if you think local government is going to walk away from pork and not find a way to get their hands on it and spend it. If they don't have something qualifies, they'll come up with a new program or project that does.
I spent 20 years in corporate America at the middle management level. I spent another 20 years in local government agencies at the middle management and executive level.
The biggest difference between the two is that private businesses look for cost controls and efficiencies trying to stay competitive.
Government agencies spend their time seeking more funding (revenues). They're monopolies and waste no effort on controlling costs or improving efficiencies. They have no incentive to do so.
I gree
Huh, was that a blog post critical of Biden. I’ve been told Reason doesn’t do that.
They occasionally slip a wonky one in between Trump, Josh Hawley and Ron DeSantis posts.
“If you want something done quickly, don't empower the bureaucrats.” Or cheaply. Or efficiently. Or with high quality. Or [fill in the blank].
Biden's 'Buy American' Promise Is a Lot More Repressive and Authoritarian Than It Seems
This isn't news at all. The various "Buy American" federal funding requirements have been around for years. They've always been a real mess. And, they make no economic sense.
But man, they sure sell the voters. I mean after all, it's only right that we buy "locally". Even when local is he entire country. Isn't it? It's job creation for the unions. ????
You should have seen all the American flags put up by hard hats on the new span during construction for the SF/Oakland Bay bridge fiasco. Even though the span sections had to be premade in China and barged over. Because it was the only location in the world that had large enough facilities to build them. Go figure.
The same problem affected me: the less of my tax money is used on such foolishness, the tougher it is for local governments to spend federal infrastructure funds rolling ball 3d