Some published figures:
Source
Mercedes Will Increase Budget For Its F1 Team By 30%, $56M for '13 Campaign
After three more or less successful seasons in F1, Mercedes "reportedly plans to increase the budget of its F1 team by about 30% in '13," according to AUTO BILD. Newly appointed non-exec Chair of the team’s board of directors Niki Lauda "has reportedly convinced company management that success will only come with a little more budget for the Brackley, England-based team." Mercedes will reportedly increase the budget of its F1 team by £35M ($56.1M) or about 30%. According to the company's '11 business report, the revenue of the Mercedes F1 team was £114.9M. This number is considerably less than Red Bull's, for example. Red Bull spent a total of £392M with 45% of it for Red Bull Racing and the rest for Red Bull Technology. In '11, the Mercedes F1 team made a £10.6M loss before taxes (AUTO BILD, 11/4).
So Merc plans to go close to the $250 that will be allowed if Bernie gets his plan through. In the meantime I have had a bit more thought about the proposal.
One obvious conclusion from the last ten years of cost control is that you can never control cost by narrowing the technical spec. You have to introduce stringent and verifiable resource and/or budget control to keep the whole thing viable. What you want is separately limiting the development budget that teams can spend on their chassis and power train manufacturers can spend on their thing. You set up controlled legal entities for that purpose. That gets a big problem out of the way. You obviously have to limit the transfer sales price for power trains and engines accordingly so that the mid field teams remain viable. To keep the small teams afloat you simply introduce an equivalence formula with V8s.
The problem starts where you have hidden development organizations working in the core competencies of the controlled entities. I'm talking about aerodynamics for the teams and engine development for the manufacturers. When those companies start to transfer their result free of charge or under charged to the entities that are budget controlled then you must catch them. It is obviously a matter of stringent auditing and setting up suitable rewards for whistle blowers. There are always disgruntled team members. The risk of something getting out must be too high.
Today you have many tools to penalize or threaten a racing or manufacturing company into compliance. The directors have to apply for an FiA license. You can ban the directors if they have known about cheating. You can have severe sporting and financial penalties. As soon as you have the governing body at the driving wheel you will see people clean up their act very quickly. Bernie has told reporters in Abu Dhabi that he will offer $500k to all whistle blowers who report on cheating the budget.
One thing that you can never stop is personal transfer between different entities of manufacturers. So for instance a guy doing research for Ferrari's LeMans engines suddenly pops up at the F1 engine entity. That you cannot stop. The same can obviously happen at Mercedes, Honda, Porsche or any other manufacturer. It is something that will even out as soon as you have attracted enough manufacturers. And limiting budgets will obviously attract manufacturers faster than anything else.
I'm just privately chuckling at the idea of Baretzky getting a phone call by Piech ordering him to prop up the F1 project in Weissach. It would be something I would like to watch happening.
FiA, FOM and the teams need to act on this ASAP as Toto Wolff has confirmed. If you freeze it now at the amount which they are currently spending ($250m) and drive it down from there over several years you can prevent a bubble. That proposal btw is from Ross Brawn. Look at 2006 when they had budgets in excess of $400m. You definitely do not want them to go anywhere near that again. $250m for 2013 would be a good starting point but only if they agree to split it for 2014 and then drive it down as Brawn suggested in the following years. I would propose a plan such as this:
2013: teams $250m ; engines unlimited
2014: teams $180m ; engines $50m
2015: teams $150m ; engines $40m
2016: Teams $120m ; engines $35m
2015: Teams $100m ; engines $30m
I think at $130m p.a. there would be plenty of manufacturers coming back into F1. There would also bee more teams if you are sure that you can run it competitively at $100m.