clipped from: www.mcclatchydc.com   

In a move expected to cost 300 American jobs, the government is switching to cheaper off-shore condoms, including some made in China.


The switch comes despite implied assurances over the years that the agency would continue to buy American whenever possible.


"Of course, we considered how many U.S. jobs would be affected by this move,” said a USAID official who spoke on the condition that he would not be named. But he said the reasons for the change included lower prices (2 cents versus more than 5 cents for U.S.-made condoms) and the fact that Congress dropped “buy American language” in a recent appropriations bill.


Besides, he said, the sole U.S. supplier — an Alabama company called Alatech — had previous delivery problems under the program.


In fact, the government is close to accepting condoms from two offshore companies: Unidus Corp., which makes condoms in South Korea, and Qingdao Double Butterfly Group, which makes them in China.