Give this Nov 2016 article a read: http://www.itv.com/news/2016-11-25/...-bill-down-to-just-5-2m-on-372-3m-of-profits/
Not sure what to make the article yet, but according to the writer, F1 has made $5 billion in profits since 2006. However, they've managed to pay only $122.9 million in taxes. How the eff?
Also, take a look at this line "Last year, F1 had $1.7bn of revenue which principally comes from three sources: race hosting fees, television broadcasting fees and advertising and sponsorship of races." For poops and giggles, lets cut the $1.7 billion into thirds for the primary revenue sources. That's about $560 million from each source. To break that down for the race hosting fees specifically, it means each track/city has to pay $27 million to host a race weekend. Keep in mind, this is if every track pays the same amount (not likely). Bottom line, this is ridiculous.
Now that I'm pissed off, I'm going to go crash an F1 car in rFactor 2 just to stick it to the man...at least in my head.
Not sure what to make the article yet, but according to the writer, F1 has made $5 billion in profits since 2006. However, they've managed to pay only $122.9 million in taxes. How the eff?
Also, take a look at this line "Last year, F1 had $1.7bn of revenue which principally comes from three sources: race hosting fees, television broadcasting fees and advertising and sponsorship of races." For poops and giggles, lets cut the $1.7 billion into thirds for the primary revenue sources. That's about $560 million from each source. To break that down for the race hosting fees specifically, it means each track/city has to pay $27 million to host a race weekend. Keep in mind, this is if every track pays the same amount (not likely). Bottom line, this is ridiculous.
Now that I'm pissed off, I'm going to go crash an F1 car in rFactor 2 just to stick it to the man...at least in my head.