As we move forward with our current roster it will be almost impossible to avoid the luxury tax in future years. That is a given. However, this topic is more about the luxury tax and the implications they pose in general.
In the 2011 CBA, one agreement was that there would be greater luxury tax implications the further you go over the tax line. Previously it was a 1:1 ratio, but it became much more harsh. From ESPN.com:
Starting in 2012-13, teams pay an incremental tax that increases with every $5 million above the tax threshold ($1.50, $1.75, $2.50, $3.25, etc.). Teams that are repeat offenders (paying tax at least four out of the past five seasons) have a tax that is higher still -- $1 more at each increment ($2.50, $2.75, $3.50, $4.25, etc.).
In 2012-13, the salary cap was set at just over $58M with a tax line of $70.3M. Compare that to next season where the salary cap is set to be ~$101M with a tax line of ~$123M. And it only gets worse from there with the cap and tax set to increase at proposed levels of $5-7M each year through at least the 2025-26 season.
My point? When this original deal was put in place, it used numbers rather than percentages to deal with tax 'offenders.' With a tax line of only $70M, it would be quite difficult to blow by that number too much since salaries were only able to increase a certain amount. However, with the cap and tax at all-time highs and continuing to soar, we are still using the 'every $5M above the tax threshold' parameters. I don't believe this part of the agreement was very well thought out.
So what do you think? Should the new CBA have addressed these antiquated tax numbers from 2011 to ease the burden with such otherworldly salaries or do you believe that teams spending above the tax deserve whatever penalty they receive?