Following the formation of the Government of National Unity in South Africa in April 1994, member states concurred that the existing agreement should be renegotiated to democratise SACU and address needs of the SACU member states more effectively. With this in mind, the Ministers of Trade and Industry of the five member states met in
Pretoria on 11 November 1994 to discuss the renegotiation of the 1969 agreement. The Ministers appointed a Customs Union Task Team (CUTT), which was mandated to make recommendations to the Ministers. CUTT has met on numerous occasions in the member states, and declares that good progress has been made in the renegotiation process. At a meeting of Ministers of Trade and Finance Departments from the SACU member states, held in Centurion, Pretoria on 5 September 2000, the Ministers reached consensus on the principles underpinning institutional reform in the SACU. The institutional administrative structure of the revenue pool was agreed as follows: :;Council of Ministers: Consisting of one minister from each SACU member state, it would be the supreme SACU decision-making body and would meet quarterly. The decisions taken by this council would only be by consensus. :;Commission: An administrative body composed of senior officials, three technical liaison committees and an established Agricultural Liaison Committee. :;Tribunal: An independent body of experts. It would report directly to the Council of Ministers. The tribunal would be responsible for tariff-setting and the anti-dumping mechanism. :;Secretariat: Responsible for day-to-day operations of the pool. It would be funded from the revenue pool. Its location would be determined by senior officials who were directed to meet after one month to develop proposals for the implementation of the revised SACU institutional structure. SACU ministers further agreed that the revenue share accruing to each member state should be calculated from three basic components: • a share of the customs pool; • a share of the excise pool; and • a share of a development component. By agreement, these components would be distributed as follows: • The customs component, allocated according to each country's share of total intra-SACU trade, including re-exports. • The excise component, net of the development component, allocated on the basis of GDP. • The development component, fixed at 15% of the total excise pool and distributed to all SACU members in an inverse proportion to each country's GDP/capita. While SACU entered into a free trade deal with the four-nation
European Free Trade Association on 1 July 2006, its negotiations with the United States for a
free trade agreement have stalled (as of 8 January 2008). SACU is involved in negotiations for a free trade agreement – the
Economic Partnership Agreements (EPAs) – with the EU, and the organisation corresponded with the
EU Trade Commissioner,
Karel De Gucht, between February and March 2010, to request that the EU not demand ratification and implementation of the EPAs at the next round of negotiations without the concerns of the SACU countries being addressed. De Gucht replied that he would like to "invite the SADC EPA countries concerned to swiftly complete signature, notification and implementation of the interim EPA" and that "in the meantime, the EU is more than willing to address all pending issues and concerns." == Comparison with other regional blocs ==