Drivers, top management and other member still active also agreed to lower their salary
MCLaren is the first team to do that, I assume others will follow.
We are also talking about a budget cap going down from 175millions to 100 millions

Jambier wrote: ↑02 Apr 2020, 10:17McLaren F1 team now puts employee on partial unemployement
Drivers, top management and other member still active also agreed to lower their salary
MCLaren is the first team to do that, I assume others will follow.
We are also talking about a budget cap going down from 175millions to 100 millions![]()
I don’t think the budget cap covers the PUmclaren111 wrote: ↑02 Apr 2020, 11:27Jambier wrote: ↑02 Apr 2020, 10:17McLaren F1 team now puts employee on partial unemployement
Drivers, top management and other member still active also agreed to lower their salary
MCLaren is the first team to do that, I assume others will follow.
We are also talking about a budget cap going down from 175millions to 100 millions![]()
If they change to only 100 Million they will have to get cheaper PU's...
I assume that if the budget cap is implemented, there will be a lot of exceptions, assumptions and regulations, for instance, fabricating something is more expensive then designing it yourself. HAAS for instance outsources the whole fabrication to Ferrari and Dalara. If those two bills is the rule, then RedBull Racing will buy their cars from RedBull technology for 1 dollar. It will be a lot of accounting and probably a technical/accounting team giving parts and operations a value.Ground Effect wrote: ↑02 Apr 2020, 11:28I don’t think the budget cap covers the PUmclaren111 wrote: ↑02 Apr 2020, 11:27Jambier wrote: ↑02 Apr 2020, 10:17McLaren F1 team now puts employee on partial unemployement
Drivers, top management and other member still active also agreed to lower their salary
MCLaren is the first team to do that, I assume others will follow.
We are also talking about a budget cap going down from 175millions to 100 millions![]()
If they change to only 100 Million they will have to get cheaper PU's...
Ground Effect wrote: ↑02 Apr 2020, 11:28I don’t think the budget cap covers the PUmclaren111 wrote: ↑02 Apr 2020, 11:27Jambier wrote: ↑02 Apr 2020, 10:17McLaren F1 team now puts employee on partial unemployement
Drivers, top management and other member still active also agreed to lower their salary
MCLaren is the first team to do that, I assume others will follow.
We are also talking about a budget cap going down from 175millions to 100 millions![]()
If they change to only 100 Million they will have to get cheaper PU's...
I would assume there are forensic accountants for whom such chicanery will be trivial to spot.Jolle wrote: ↑02 Apr 2020, 11:42I assume that if the budget cap is implemented, there will be a lot of exceptions, assumptions and regulations, for instance, fabricating something is more expensive then designing it yourself. HAAS for instance outsources the whole fabrication to Ferrari and Dalara. If those two bills is the rule, then RedBull Racing will buy their cars from RedBull technology for 1 dollar. It will be a lot of accounting and probably a technical/accounting team giving parts and operations a value.Ground Effect wrote: ↑02 Apr 2020, 11:28I don’t think the budget cap covers the PUmclaren111 wrote: ↑02 Apr 2020, 11:27
If they change to only 100 Million they will have to get cheaper PU's...
Before accountants can do their job, rules have to be made up. Simple things like, sponsored parts of the car, will they get a value etc etc. If the rules are clear, I have no doubt that a good accounting firm can monitor the burgets.nzjrs wrote: ↑02 Apr 2020, 19:29I would assume there are forensic accountants for whom such chicanery will be trivial to spot.Jolle wrote: ↑02 Apr 2020, 11:42I assume that if the budget cap is implemented, there will be a lot of exceptions, assumptions and regulations, for instance, fabricating something is more expensive then designing it yourself. HAAS for instance outsources the whole fabrication to Ferrari and Dalara. If those two bills is the rule, then RedBull Racing will buy their cars from RedBull technology for 1 dollar. It will be a lot of accounting and probably a technical/accounting team giving parts and operations a value.
I don't think there is reason to not believe there are accountants of comparable skill in relation to normal accountants just as we believe F1 drivers are skilled in relation to normal drivers.
I'd be astounded if the rules were not also made under the guidance of such high calibre accountants. It's the sensible thing to do and would mirror the strategy they have taken with Ross Brawn - poacher turned gamekeeper - or the acknowledgement that the entire game is people circumventing the rules.Jolle wrote: ↑02 Apr 2020, 20:38Before accountants can do their job, rules have to be made up. Simple things like, sponsored parts of the car, will they get a value etc etc. If the rules are clear, I have no doubt that a good accounting firm can monitor the burgets.nzjrs wrote: ↑02 Apr 2020, 19:29I would assume there are forensic accountants for whom such chicanery will be trivial to spot.Jolle wrote: ↑02 Apr 2020, 11:42
I assume that if the budget cap is implemented, there will be a lot of exceptions, assumptions and regulations, for instance, fabricating something is more expensive then designing it yourself. HAAS for instance outsources the whole fabrication to Ferrari and Dalara. If those two bills is the rule, then RedBull Racing will buy their cars from RedBull technology for 1 dollar. It will be a lot of accounting and probably a technical/accounting team giving parts and operations a value.
I don't think there is reason to not believe there are accountants of comparable skill in relation to normal accountants just as we believe F1 drivers are skilled in relation to normal drivers.
I expect the financial rulebook to be a whole lot heavier then the technical one, with amendments added weekly. Who knows... there might be a whole new forum “f1financial” where fans of financing tricks and innovation come together. At the moment of course, on a financial perspective the image F1 has is one of very expensive and tax dodging (as in living in Monaco for the drivers)nzjrs wrote: ↑02 Apr 2020, 22:47I'd be astounded if the rules were not also made under the guidance of such high calibre accountants. It's the sensible thing to do and would mirror the strategy they have taken with Ross Brawn - poacher turned gamekeeper - or the acknowledgement that the entire game is people circumventing the rules.Jolle wrote: ↑02 Apr 2020, 20:38Before accountants can do their job, rules have to be made up. Simple things like, sponsored parts of the car, will they get a value etc etc. If the rules are clear, I have no doubt that a good accounting firm can monitor the burgets.nzjrs wrote: ↑02 Apr 2020, 19:29
I would assume there are forensic accountants for whom such chicanery will be trivial to spot.
I don't think there is reason to not believe there are accountants of comparable skill in relation to normal accountants just as we believe F1 drivers are skilled in relation to normal drivers.
No one knows
bauc wrote: ↑09 Apr 2020, 08:56
We are going off topic here but this might lead to an answer
https://www.formula1.com/en/latest/arti ... LVt4k.html