Some countries work that way. Tickets based on your income. Finland is one I think, if you earn over a million a year, a ticket would cost you 10, 20k maybe, whereas a person who earns a standard 30-40k income would get a ticket in the hundreds. A fine is meant to hurt so you won't do it again. If you can afford your daily speeding ticket of 150 pounds because you make millions a year, it essentially puts you above the law just because you have the money to keep paying off the fine for your offence. People who can't afford it however, need to tell their kids ''no vacation, dad got a speeding ticket he can't pay for''. A standard fining system, as used by most countries, is a unfair system that promotes unequality between people based on their income. Under the law, everyone is to be treated equally IN EQUAL CIRCUMSTANCES. Never understood why so many countries have fixed fines for minor offences. Makes no sense at all.
''One law for the rich, one law for the people like you and me''
The Exploited - Law for the Rich.