The cost cutting that will be required because of the introduction of F1’s budget cap in 2021 could mean Mercedes will diversify into other motorsport championships in the future.

That’s according to team principal Toto Wolff, who says that diversification might be the only way for large F1 teams like Mercedes and Ferrari to continue in their current form without having to let hundreds of key personel go.

From next season, all teams will have to operate within a budget of $145 million, which will be progressively further lowered over the following seasons until it stabilises at $135 million for 2023-25.

Wolff accepts the need for the reduced figures in the wake of the shock to the sport due to the coronavirus pandemic. But he says it will undoubtedly have an effect on how the big manufacturers approach F1 in the future, as well as motor racing in general.

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“We’re living in a financial reality that is very different to pre-COVID-19, and we have accepted the lower budget cap,” he told Autosport magazine this week.

“It is a must that successful F1 franchises earn money rather than lose money,” he acknowledged.

“For us it is also a way of making sure that Daimler not only appreciates the sporting and marketing benefits of the platform, but also to make it as cost-neutral as possible,” he added. “This is why we need to support such a cost cap.”

But the cost cap will mean that Mercedes will need to shed skilled staff from their workforce at Brackley – unless they can be redeployed onto a new project away from F1.

Ferrari faces the same hard choices at Maranello and has started to look at setting up new teams to race in other championships, with a mooted IndyCar project under discussion.

Wolff says that Mercedes might also look into that approach as a way of retaining its staff while still meeting the F1 cost-cutting requirements overall.

©Mercedes