I'm probably not getting what you're asking here but I don't think anybody thought the BRI was anything but fixed (or hard) there was talk of maybe negotiating a flex BRI. The only other thing I could think of being confused (besides me) is that this year the NBA had to pay the PA a chunk of money because the players salaries didn't equal 57% so the players did get some checks sometime this week (or so I read). Didn't see how the chunk was divided up on who got what.
But that is another question in my head I've been meaning to ask if the BRI is at a certain % but players are still fighting over hard caps or a "harder" cap claiming it keeps them from making money, or even guaranteed or partial guaranteed contracts in the end if the NBA teams don't meet the BRI % the NBA still cuts them a check. I would think they could work out something that players that got cut and didn't get resigned and/or other "victims" of these new potential new system ideas could get a bigger portion of the cut.
I was asking because people keep writing about various issues that have differing implications as if they are the same in this thread.
The NBA could have instituted a hard cap for NBA teams (this is in theory to make a point I understand they can't do this unilaterally) at $10 million per team two years ago and the players would still have received 57% of BRI. That's the way it is. As a result the BRI discussion and the hard cap discussion are entirely different. If that were to have happened, player compensation would have been the same but the effective earnings of the players would be less transparent because the public doesn't see how money is divided out of the escrow payment among the players. Those (like CJ) who rant on and on about exorbitant player salaries are missing this fundamental distinction.
The hard cap discussion really only matters to the players to the extent it affects player movement, implies the need for non-guaranteed contracts, and affects high-end star's bargaining power (since they are largely the ones who benefit from Bird rights). Team parity is, at best, a tertiary issue from the player's perspective when it comes to a hard cap. A hard cap, from that perspective, is entirely an owner-to-owner negotiation. It's not a players vs. owners dispute on team competitiveness at all.