Easy enough to just punish by reducing the budget of any team that goes over the budget by twice the error. Apply that for 2 or 3 years.Big Tea wrote: ↑05 Oct 2022, 22:41There must be some allowance on this though. They cannot draw a line on the day and the penny as things take time to clear or for a bill to be cleared. If it is a million surely that is trivial.
OK, its past the trigger point, so impose a punishment, but not something that is going to change much.
As someone here said, say 2.5 mill off for the next 2 years or something.
Go over by $1m and you lose $2m for each of the next two seasons, for example. That means small bookkeeping errors (in the thousands/tens of thousands) that make no real difference have little in the way of punishment, but figures that buy real performance gains result in real performance losses for the next 2 years. That's the only way to focus the teams' attention on not going over and not trying to be clever with the figures.
What I can see happening is a deal being done whereby the FIA applies the same "first lap" rules to this first round of budget cap assessments. "It's the first year so we're going to be lenient, but from now on we're going to be really tough". Gets them out of having to apply penalties that might affect a title race and thus means they don't have to answer any tough questions. That an overspend in the first round of budget caps can have a run-on benefit in to following seasons that is hard for others to catch won't be an issue they want to recognise.