In Finland, how much you make determines the amount of a fine.
For instance, a Finnish millionaire recently got a 112,000-euro speeding ticket (he was about 10 over). That’s because the fine is calculated using what he earned last year.
So the guy who inherits his wealth and sits on his butt is fine. But the guy who’s working his rear end off gets penalized more.
Taking this to its logical conclusion, a young person should get more time in prison because he has more life available to him than an old person.
I understand the rationale – you want the punishment to be felt equally by all citizens. But this flies in the face of the concept of all people are equal in the eyes of the law. If the concern is that speeding is such a big deal (or any given crime) then lock them up. But looking at how much someone earns as a means to determining punishment is repellent.
Consider this: Two people making the same amount per hour. One person chooses to work part time. The other person chooses to work 60 hours a week. Both are caught speeding. The person who works more ends up having to pay more.
It creates a society that punishes achievement. Luckily for Finland, it has a population of 5 million and is largely homogenous. So it can get away with this kind of thinly veiled class warfare.
In the United States, by contrast, such policies would be a disaster.
But take a look at how left-wing Digg users react:
http://digg.com/autos/Finnish_millionaire_gets_111_888_euro_speeding_ticket