littlebigcat wrote: ↑02 Nov 2022, 14:51
They incorrectly applied it to the cost cap.
They only spent £2m over because a member of staff said they could, when they were wrong. So really they should have spent £98m which means £2m less in non fixed costs. That’s performance related costs.
Financial competency is now part of the sport. Red Bull failed at it.
The discussion point here was: did one team gain an advantage in development over competitors of ~0.4M or of ~1.8M.
If both teams spent the same amount on development (102 M in this hypothetical example), then the teams had equal funds available for development, even if one team got 2M back (abiding the cap) and the other team, while being eligible for the same 2M, did not due to an error on their own behalf (thus breaching the cap). Hence, the team that breached the cap
did not have a development advantage over the competition: they spent exactly the same amount on development as the competitor, while it
cost them 2M more.
And sure, one solution was to spend 2M less and take a
development disadvantage compared to the competition, that would have been a solution.
But that doesn't mean they have an advantage by spending the money and not getting the tax break. They still spent the same amount on development as the competition did.
And sure, they can be penalized for failing in terms of financial competency and rightfully so. But that still doesn't mean that the incompetency in terms of failing to get the tax break gave them a performance advantage compared to the competition.
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Now, going back from the hypothetical above to the situation here, my take with the information that we have is:
- RB, like other teams, was eligible for a tax break
- RB, like other teams probably did, factored that into their budget and adapted their spendings accordingly.
- RB failed getting the break that they were eligible for through a fault of their own.
- The consequence is that RB did not
spend more on development than other teams, but it did
cost them more because they had to pay a certain amount of taxes that other teams were exempt from (or got back).
- Since this tax is accounted in the cost cap, RB exceeded the overall cap, on these grounds, by 1.4M pound.
Based on this information (regarding this specific aspect of te breach), RB did not have an active development advantage over competitors in the sense that they had more money to spend on development than competitors.
They had a financial disadvantage in that the same
spending did
cost them more by not getting the tax exemption, but that's their own fault in the end.
If they had applied the tax break in the cost cap as they should have, they would have had a development disadvantage compared to the competition, and in hindsight they should have. But, considering they were eligible for the tax exemption, I do not think you can blame them for factoring it in before they got it - that seems to be rather standard practice to me, and would be absolutely no problem if they did not cock up the subsequent application.
The fact that they did mess that up is, indeed, failing at financial competence and a penalty for that is fair (the fact that they already had a 'penalty' of 1.4M in higher tax expenses is irrelevant there - it's their own fault).
But, considering that they were eligible for the tax break (hence it's not outrageous they factored it in) and did not gain an active development gain over competition from this, a financial penalty seems to be a fair solution to me - and that's what they got. Hence, I consider the penalty to be fair.
Note, this considers the tax break part - not the other 0.4M.