[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 48, Volume 6]
[Revised as of October 1, 2003]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 48CFR1515.404-471]

[Page 27-30]
 
            TITLE 48--FEDERAL ACQUISITION REGULATIONS SYSTEM
 
               CHAPTER 15--ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
 
PART 1515--CONTRACTING BY NEGOTIATION--Table of Contents
 
                    Subpart 1515.4--Contract Pricing
 
Sec. 1515.404-471  EPA structured approach for developing profit or fee objectives.

    (a) General. To properly reflect differences among contracts, and to 
select an appropriate relative profit/fee in consideration of these 
differences, weightings have been developed for application by the 
contracting officer to standard measurement bases representative of the 
prescribed profit factors cited in FAR 15.404(d) and EPAAR 1515.404-
471(b)(1). Each profit factor or subfactor, or its components, has been 
assigned weights relative to their value to the contract's overall 
effort, and the range of weights to be applied to each profit factor.
    (b)(1) Profit/fee factors. The factors set forth in this paragraph, 
and the weighted ranges listed after each factor, shall be used in all 
instances where the profit/fee is negotiated.

                 Contractor's Input to Total Performance
------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                               Weight Range  (Percent)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Direct material............................  1 to 4.
Professional/technical labor...............  8 to 15.
Professional/technical overhead............  6 to 9.
General labor..............................  5 to 9.
General overhead...........................  4 to 7.
Subcontractors.............................  1 to 4.
Other direct costs.........................  1 to 3.
General and administrative expenses........  5 to 8.
Contractor's assumption of contract cost     0 to 6.
 risk.
------------------------------------------------------------------------

    (2) The contracting officer shall first measure the ``Contractor's 
Input to Total Performance'' by the assignment of a profit percentage 
within the designated weight ranges to each element of contract cost. 
Such costs are multiplied by the specific percentages to arrive at a 
specific dollar profit or fee.
    (3) The amount calculated for facilities capital cost of money 
(FCCM) shall not be included as part of the cost base for computation of 
profit or fee. The profit or fee objective shall be reduced by an amount 
equal to the amount of facilities capital cost of money allowed. A 
complete discussion of the determination of facilities capital cost of 
money and its application and administration is set forth in FAR 31.205-
10, and the Appendix to the FAR (see 48 CFR 9904.414).
    (4) After computing a total dollar profit or fee for the 
Contractor's Input to Total Performance, the contracting officer shall 
calculate the specific profit dollars assigned for cost risk and 
performance. This is accomplished by multiplying the total Government 
cost objective, exclusive of any FCCM, by the specific weight assigned 
to cost risk and performance. The contracting officer shall then 
determine the profit or fee objective by adding the total profit dollars 
for the Contractor's Input to Total Performance to the specific dollar 
profits assigned to cost risk and performance. The contracting officer 
shall use EPA Form 1900-2 in hardcopy or electronic copy equivalent to 
facilitate the calculation of the profit or fee objective.
    (5) The weight factors discussed in this section are designed for 
arriving at profit or fee objectives for other than nonprofit and not-
for-profit organizations. Nonprofit and not-for-profit organizations are 
addressed as follows:
    (i) Nonprofit and not-for-profit organizations are defined as those 
business entities organized and operated:
    (A) Exclusively for charitable, scientific, or educational purposes;
    (B) Where no part of the net earnings inure to the benefit of any 
private shareholder or individual;
    (C) Where no substantial part of the activities is for propaganda or 
otherwise attempting to influence legislation or participating in any 
political campaign on behalf of any candidate for public office; and
    (D) Which are exempt from Federal income taxation under Section 51 
of the Internal Revenue Code. (26 U.S.C.)
    (ii) For contracts with nonprofit and not-for-profit organizations 
where fees are involved, special factor of -3 percent shall be assigned 
in all cases.
    (c) Assignment of values to specific factors--(1) General. In making 
a judgment

[[Page 28]]

on the value of each factor, the contracting officer should be governed 
by the definition, description, and purpose of the factors, together 
with considerations for evaluation set forth in this paragraph.
    (2) Contractor's input to total performance. This factor is a 
measure of how much the contractor is expected to contribute to the 
overall effort necessary to meet the contract performance requirements 
in an efficient manner. This factor, which is separate from the 
contractor's responsibility for contract performance, takes into account 
what resources are necessary, and the creativity and ingenuity needed 
for the contractor to perform the statement of work successfully. This 
is a recognition that within a given performance output, or within a 
given sales dollar figure, necessary efforts on the part of individual 
contractors can vary widely in both value, quantity, and quality, and 
that the profit or fee objective should reflect the extent and nature of 
the contractor's contribution to total performance. Greater profit 
opportunity should be provided under contracts requiring a high degree 
of professional and managerial skill and to prospective contractors 
whose skills, facilities, and technical assets can be expected to lead 
to efficient and economical contract performance. The evaluation of this 
factor requires an analysis of the cost content of the proposed contract 
as follows:
    (i) Direct material (purchased parts and other material). (A) 
Analysis of these cost items shall include an evaluation of the 
managerial and technical effort necessary to obtain the required 
material. This evaluation shall include consideration of the number of 
orders and suppliers, and whether established sources are available or 
new sources must be developed. The contracting officer shall also 
determine whether the contractor will, for example, obtain the materials 
by routine orders or readily available supplies (particularly those of 
substantial value in relation to the total contract costs), or by 
detailed subcontracts for which the prime contractor will be required to 
develop complex specifications involving creative design.
    (B) Consideration should be given to the managerial and technical 
efforts necessary for the prime contractor to administer subcontracts, 
and to select subcontractors, including efforts to break out 
subcontracts from sole sources, through the introduction of competition.
    (C) Recognized costs proposed as direct material costs such as scrap 
charges shall be treated as material for profit evaluation.
    (D) If intracompany transfers are accepted at price, in accordance 
with FAR 31.205-26(e), they should be excluded from the profit or fee 
computation. Other intracompany transfers shall be evaluated by 
individual components of cost, i.e., material, labor, and overhead.
    (ii) Professional/technical and general labor. Analysis of labor 
should include evaluation of the comparative quality and level of the 
talents and experience to be employed. In evaluating labor for the 
purpose of assigning profit dollars, consideration should be given to 
the amount of notable scientific talent or unusual or scarce talent 
needed, in contrast to journeyman effort or supporting personnel. The 
diversity, or lack thereof, of scientific and engineering specialties 
required for contract performance, and the corresponding need for 
supervision and coordination, should also be evaluated.
    (iii) Overhead and general and administrative expenses. (A) Where 
practicable, analysis of these overhead items of cost should include the 
evaluation of the individual elements of these expenses, and how much 
they contribute to contract performance. This analysis should include a 
determination of the amount of labor within these overhead pools, and 
how this labor would be treated if it were considered as direct labor 
under the contract. The allocable labor elements should be given the 
same profit consideration as if they were direct labor. The other 
elements of indirect cost pools should be evaluated to determine whether 
they are routine expenses such as utilities, depreciation, and 
maintenance, and therefore given less profit consideration.
    (B) The contractor's accounting system need not break down its 
overhead

[[Page 29]]

expenses within the classification of professional/technical overhead, 
general overhead and general and administrative expenses.
    (iv) Subcontractors. (A) Subcontract costs should be analyzed from 
the standpoint of the talents and skills of the subcontractors. The 
analysis should consider if the prime contractor normally should be 
expected to have people with comparable expertise employed as full-time 
staff, or if the contract requires skills not normally available in an 
employer-employee relationship. Where the prime contractor is using 
subcontractors to perform labor which would normally be expected to be 
done in-house, the rating factor should generally be at or near 1 
percent. Where exceptional expertise is retained, or the prime 
contractor is participating in the mentor-protege program, the assigned 
weight should be nearer to the high end of the range.
    (v) Other direct costs. The analysis of these costs should be 
similar to the analysis of direct material.
    (3) Contractor's assumption of contract cost risk. (i) The risk of 
contract costs should be shifted to the fullest extent practicable to 
contractors, and the Government should assign a rating that reflects the 
degree of risk assumption. Evaluation of this risk requires a 
determination of the degree of cost responsibility the contractor 
assumes, the reliability of the cost estimates in relation to the task 
assumed, and the chance of the contractor's success or failure. This 
factor is specifically limited to the risk of contract costs. Thus, such 
risks of losing potential profits in other fields are not within the 
scope of this factor.
    (ii) The first determination of the degree of cost responsibility 
assumed by the contractor is related to the sharing of total risk of 
contract cost by the Government and the contractor, depending on 
selection of contract type. The extremes are a cost-plus-fixed-fee 
contract requiring only that the contractor use its best efforts to 
perform a task, and a firm-fixed-price contract for a complex item. A 
cost-plus-fixed-fee contract would reflect a minimum assumption of cost 
responsibility by the contractor, whereas a firm-fixed-price contract 
would reflect a complete assumption of cost responsibility by the 
contractor. Therefore, in the first step of determining the value given 
for the contractor's assumption of contract cost risk, a lower rating 
would be assigned to a proposed cost-plus-fixed-fee best efforts 
contract, and a higher rating would be assigned to a firm-fixed-price 
contract.
    (iii) The second determination is that of the reliability of the 
cost estimates. Sound price negotiation requires well-defined contract 
objectives and reliable cost estimates. An excessive cost estimate 
reduces the possibility that the cost of performance will exceed the 
contract price, thereby reducing the contractor's assumption of contract 
cost risk.
    (iv) The third determination is that of the difficulty of the 
contractor's task. The contractor's task may be difficult or easy, 
regardless of the type of contract.
    (v) Contractors are likely to assume greater cost risks only if the 
contracting officer objectively analyzes the risk incident to the 
proposed contract, and is willing to compensate contractors for it. 
Generally, a cost-plus-fixed-fee contract would not justify a reward for 
risk in excess of 1 percent, nor would a firm-fixed-price contract 
normally justify a reward of less than 4 percent. Where proper contract 
type selection has been made, the reward for risk by contract type would 
usually fall into the following percentage ranges:

------------------------------------------------------------------------
              Type of contract                    Percentage ranges
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Cost-plus-fixed-fee........................  0 to 1.
Prospective price determination............  4 to 5.
Firm-fixed-price...........................  4 to 6.
------------------------------------------------------------------------

    (A) These ranges may not be appropriate for all acquisitions. The 
contracting officer might determine that a basis exists for high 
confidence in the reasonableness of the estimate, and that little 
opportunity exists for cost reduction without extraordinary efforts. The 
contractor's willingness to accept ceilings on their burden rates should 
be considered as a risk factor for cost-plus-fixed-fee contracts.

[[Page 30]]

    (B) In making a contract cost risk evaluation in an acquisition that 
involves definitization of a letter contract, consideration should be 
given to the effect on total contract cost risk as a result of partial 
performance under a letter contract. Under some circumstances, the total 
amount of cost risk may have been effectively reduced by the existence 
of a letter contract. Under other circumstances, it may be apparent that 
the contractor's cost risk remained substantially as great as though a 
letter contract had not been used. Where a contractor has begun work 
under an anticipatory cost letter, the risk assumed is greater than 
normal. To be equitable, the determination of a profit weight for 
application to the total of all recognized costs, both those incurred 
and those yet to be expended, must be made with consideration to all 
relevant circumstances, not just to the portion of costs incurred or 
percentage of work completed prior to definitization.