Is Hi-fi getting more expensive?


When I first get into high end audio in 2003, $3000 can buy you a very good cd player. Now $3000 just get you started. All of sudden, most of the major high end cable companies all ask $10,000.00+ for their top of the line speaker cables. The economy is bad but you don’t see high end audio getting cheaper. The entry ticket to Hi-Fi is getting more expensive and Hi-fi is getting far away from average people.

I guess the reason is that if the economy is bad, less people buy high end audio. So companies have to charge more for each unit to cover their development cost, and even fewer people will buy their equipment. This will be a vicious cycle that never ends. I think some company should cut the price by 50% to break the cycle. I know there is lots of pressure for companies not to follow the price trend when one cable company list its cable for $10,000+. If you don’t follow it, people might think you cable is not as good as the high price tag cable. But if you cut unit price by half, your sale volume can go up to make up your lower price. Volume is important. Windows 7 is more complex and powerful than Sooloos, but why Windows 7 is $200 while Sooloos charge yoy $10,000? You can also look at computers, they are always getting faster and powerful while still keep at the same price point or cheaper. Once other companies see the benefits, they will join it too. Pioneer and Sony are not incapable of making great audio gear, they just choose not to because of the tiny market size. If big companies like Pioneer or Sony see there is a big market for high end audio, they will come and join the game.

I feel Hi-Fi almost double its price from 2003-2009.We really need some companies to take the first step(cutting the price) to break the vicious cycle. Now these days more people are listen to compressed music like MP3/ipod. We really need to find a way to attract more people to good quality audio to benefit all of us, otherwise we all lose in the end.

This might be my wishful/unrealistic thinking. People are welcome to share their thought.
yxlei

Showing 5 responses by tvad

Yxlei, the high end audio companies that you are thinking of do not use a sales volume paradigm, just as other producers of high end luxury items don't rely on volume sales.

Believe me, the world is full of wealthy people getting richer by the week who are the target market for the manufacturers of audio goods you are describing. These people have no problem paying for exclusivity.
I agree with John, particularly concerning new entertainment options supplanting high end audio. 20 or 30 year olds sitting passively in front of a two channel (or multi channel) music-only system versus gaming or actively doing something at a computer? I'm going with gaming.

Buy what you want for the long term now folks, because high end audio is only going to shrink from here.

IMO.
...fewer people interested might result in increased availability of good used pieces and drive down the cost for many fine pieces for the remaining dinosaurs like us.
Mapman (System | Reviews | Threads | Answers)
I believe the good used pieces will become more scarce on the used market, as more of us value the truly exceptional components and keep them rather than churning through the latest new offerings. As a result, the price of these pieces on the used market may actually stabilize or increase.

It'll be interesting to see how this plays out in the next two or three years.
The problem we may encounter when we see great deals on previously unaffordable goods, will lie in being unable to sell what we want to replace.
Macrojack (Reviews | Threads | Answers)
You're not a believer in trickle down economics?

Joke.
If and when the trickle arrives, I suspect it will taste like urine.
Macrojack (Reviews | Threads | Answers)
Uhg. That was brutal to read at 7:30am.