In Finland, traffic fines use a “day-fine” system, where penalties are based on a driver’s daily income instead of a fixed fee.
This means the same speeding offense can cost a wealthy driver far more, sometimes exceeding $100,000.
The goal is fairness and real deterrence, ensuring penalties affect everyone equally. Studies suggest the system helps reduce repeat offenses and improve road safety.
This means the same speeding offense can cost a wealthy driver far more, sometimes exceeding $100,000.
The goal is fairness and real deterrence, ensuring penalties affect everyone equally. Studies suggest the system helps reduce repeat offenses and improve road safety.
In Finland, traffic fines use a “day-fine” system, where penalties are based on a driver’s daily income instead of a fixed fee.
This means the same speeding offense can cost a wealthy driver far more, sometimes exceeding $100,000.
The goal is fairness and real deterrence, ensuring penalties affect everyone equally. Studies suggest the system helps reduce repeat offenses and improve road safety.