The GRM message boards were recently visited by someone advocating the way driver's licenses are administered in Finland[*]. Today I decided to look at the rules for licenses - and speeding - in Finland. I was surprised to find the following:
A) speeding tickets in that nation are based on your speed and your income. They can be VERY expensive:
Steve Stecklow said: The officer pulled over Mr. Rytsola's car and issued him a speeding ticket for driving 43 miles an hour in a 25-mile-an-hour zone. The fine: $71,400. The staggering sum was no mistake. In Finland, traffic fines generally are based on two factors: the severity of the offense and the driver's income. The concept has been embedded in Finnish law for decades: When it comes to crime, the wealthy should suffer as much as the poor. Indeed, sliding-scale financial penalties are also imposed for offenses ranging from shoplifting to securities-law violations. "This is a Nordic tradition," says Erkki Wuoma, special planning adviser at the Ministry of Interior. "We have progressive taxation and progressive punishments. So the more you earn, the more you pay."
Full text: http://www.stayfreemagazine.org/public/wsj_finland.html The original story is here: http://online.wsj.com/article/SB978398058976592586.html#
B) Finland is not at all tolerant of speeders: http://www.poliisi.fi/poliisi/home.nsf/pages/F666038500AD6A4CC2256C370036DAE0?OpenDocument
The Road Traffic Act states that holders of a driving licence must be banned from driving if they have at least four times within two years, or three times within one year, been guilty of a punishable offence under the Road Traffic Act, with the exception of fixed fine offences other than speeding, or of a radar detector offence. Holders of a short-term driving licence are banned from driving if they are found guilty of the offences described in the previous paragraph three times within two years or twice within one year.
Tim, I'm not meaning to troll or reignite the previous thread. If this is at all inflammatory, please delete the topic and pretend I never posted it.
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- and, as was rightly pointed out, their information probably came from a short Top Gear segment.