The overall conclusion appears to be that punishment is diluted if you don't know how to use a calculator.
We're talking about clubs with enormous resources, they employ the finest legal minds and accountants, yet somehow it seems beyond them to remain on the right side of legally binding expenditure. For a top club a sliding scale is meaningless, it barely scratches the surface and isn't designed to stop future financial violations from happening. We might as well discuss how it's possible to be a 'little bit pregnant', which as most folks understand is a nonsense.
Until recently clubs with enormous financial muscle could spend with impunity, without a threat of penalty and went about their business without any sort of consequence at all. Now that the reality of facing a harsher, more realistic present is at their doorstep these same actors resist these rules as if, somehow, the world is being unfair and that they're incapable of following the rules. Or should we have one rule for certain clubs and another for the rest of us?
A sliding scale is a nonsense, it completely dilutes the effective threat of not being able to follow the rules. As in a previous post, the nonsensical idea of a 'proportionate' penalty makes a mockery of why this law is necessary and needed. It will send a chill and deserved wind through the corridors of those boardrooms who see themselves as above the rules that other clubs have to abide by.
Continued attempts at justifying this type of unbridled financial recklessness needs to be resisted, otherwise these same clubs will continue to dilute any law they imagine shackles their ability to spend.
Follow the example of less resourced clubs, put your house in order, do not abuse these rules, in short accept that there's such a thing as natural justice, accept that the bubble you live in will be popped and that the harsh reality you seem to think doesn't apply will creep up on you and tap you on the shoulder in an even more unpleasant manner than you had considered possible.