andrewducker (
andrewducker) wrote2009-04-25 04:45 pm
Speeding Fines
KPH over the speed limit x daily salary.
So if you're 10KPH over the speed limit and earn hundreds of thousands of pounds a year, then you're in for quite a large fine.
Apparently this is how all reasonable sized fines work in Finland - they're expressed in days of pay.
I'm in favour.
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As you said, a really poor person could otherwise get away with whatever they liked. A minimum fine level, and an alternative of prison in the case of people who cannot pay seems reasonable to me.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Day-fine
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The UK system fails to work at both the bottom and top end, being "fair" only for a small region in the middle. This system scales up and down far better.
Do you have a counter-proposal?
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And a set rate of "0.5% of your annual income per X full km/hr over the limit" has a much better case towards being fair than "an extremely variant percentage, heavily weighted towards punishing the poor far more than the rich".
I *do* totally see your point with regards to minimum limit, inability to pay, and odds of jail time - but, right now, there are all kinds of things a poor person can do where the punishment is far less than that a rich person would experience, simply because the poor can't pay fines and have no wages to garnish, etc. And yet, for some reason, we have yet to see rich people saying "Well, shit, I want to piss in public and sleep under bridges without consequences! It's not FAIR! Quick, I need to become poor in a hurry!"
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-- Steve frankly doesn't care much about the bruised egos of the super-rich, especially given the huge economic car-wreck resulting from others' coddling of them.
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In this case, though, I actually think that I am looking out for others; we're talking about fines for exessive speed in traffic, aka "breaking the law". Law and order types interested in strict enforcement as an effective deterrent to criminal behaviour should be all over this like ants at a picnic.
-- Steve thinks that you have nothing to fear from indexed traffic fines if you have nothing to hide.
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Okay. In understand. The argument is not that all rich people are twits and menaces.
It's that, without income-indexed fines, rich people are *free* to be twits and menaces while poorer twits and menaces lose their licenses and go to jail.
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(And surely the rich person loses their license either way?)
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And no, no, the rich person doesn't lose their license, not always. In general, you will lose your license fast if you can't pay. In particular, you'll get a fine that suspends your license UNTIL you pay.
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