Autosport.com, February 10, 2006
"Briatore: manufacturers should commit to F1"
By Jonathan Noble
... And Briatore has even suggested that the best solution would be for the sport to impose a budget cap - which would be enforced by the FIA in the same way that the Inland Revenue oversees company's accounts.
"The ideal situation would be to have a budget cap of 100 million dollars for each team," he said. "The job of the FIA would then be to police the budgets, just like the tax office is controlling your income and expenses. In such a formula, efficiency would win. Who makes the most with a given amount of money?"
I wrote this on this forum on Dec. 23rd.:
GPMA-online.com was asking for suggestions from the public. I asked why FIA doesn't simply limit budgets and this was their response:
"This idea has indeed discussed, following detailed suggestions by Jaguar Racing in 2004. Unfortunately, the (majority of the) other teams could not support its implementation so it was taken off the agenda."
If the limit was $100 million dollars can anyone reasonably argue that it's not enough money to run two cars? The only argument one could make is that it could hinder innovation, but FIA is doing that now, especially with the 2008 proposal that includes, "Banning new technologies that give teams a clear performance advantage..." I don't even understand that.
A limit on a team's budget would be easy to enforce simply by installing auditors. FIA polices everything else, why not budgets?