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Early B my answer is yes certainly high end audio prices are out of control. But, BIG BUT, it is an amazing time best ever to be an entry level audiophile. With the economy for the past few decades minting 1,000s of new million and billionaires the upper limits of boutique HiFi gear pricing has been constantly tested and reset upward. Lost or overshadowed is the fact technology especially Moore's Law (the observation that the number of transistors in an integrated circuit (IC) doubles about every two years) and software offer amazing capabilities at the entry level.For example to your question can $1,665 buy the same quality of gear as $1,000 twenty years ago? I answer no, it buys capabilities barely dreamed of in 2004. Here is an example of such a Moore's Law turbocharged system.Built GR Research XLS-S Encore https://gr-research.com/product/xls-encore/, with base poly caps and connectors in oak veneer $1260/pair.Add WiiM Amp at $299 https://www.amazon.com/WiiM-Amp-Multiroom-Streaming-Chromecast/dp/B0CGCLXH4H?th=1 and system total is $1559 for a 60wpc system with inputs including HDMI Arc, Optical, analog Line AND Network - IEEE 802.11 b/g/n/ac Dual band Wi-Fi, 10/100 Mbps LAN; Bluetooth - BT 5.1, A2DP Sink and Source, AVRCP, BLE HID. Free app controls it all from our pocket computers (aka Smart Phones). The typical college student or someone on a very limited budget who can pull together $1500-$2000 for a HiFi has a phone and internet access. Take this system and a free Spotify (yes lossy, but remember we're on a strict budget here) and for $1559 I have a kicking system with access to something like 4 million songs at the touch of a screen.
Through our entire audio journey, we've tried to: balance wants vs. needs, get "good value" for each of our heavily researched purchases, understand and accept what the purchase added to our overall listening pleasure, etc.
Happen that the US audiophile are not used to buying overseas, they only know how to buy in US, they buy anything made in usa.
As Americans, we know that 95% of audio gear is made in China, even if it has an American label. If a company claims their gear is "made in America," that usually means it was partially assembled here, but most of the parts were made in China, Mexico, or elsewhere. There are outliers like Schiit who provide reasonably priced products and intentionally seek out local suppliers, but the vast majority of American companies don't do that because it isn't cost-effective.
At a retail price just shy of £7,500 Mola Mola’s Lupe phono stage can hardly be characterised as entry level, but neither can it be classified as overly expensive if we consider the broader market. At the risk of losing readers struggling to square the sometimes quite ridiculous cost of our audiophile obsession I’m going to call the Lupe mid-price.Why that matters is because cost is one thing but sometimes value is quite another. Mola Mola has form for producing products that deliver sonics considerably better than their price points might suggest. The Tambaqui DAC is one example that gives little-to-nothing away to alternatives costing up to twice as much. Other reviewers tell me the company’s amplifiers similarly sound better than we might expect for the money. Now the phono stage from the same stable is available we can observe the pattern all over again. It too sounds superior when compared to some significantly more expensive alternatives. Coincidence? I think not.
In the context of that well-matched $100k system, the $27k speakers could very well have a place.