Guys, it's simply not true to make a statement that a higher sensitivity speaker is more costly to make. Drivers, cabinet material, R&D, spikes, connectors, wire, glues, finishes.... and of course how many points dealers get to sell themLet's be clear about one thing: Sensitivity isn't the same thing as Efficiency and it really is the latter which is the focus of this thread. You can build a high sensitivity speaker by simply taking a number of low efficiency drivers and putting them in parallel. Cheap and high sensitivity, but its efficiency will remain low. High Efficiency cannot be achieved cheaply for the simple fact that there is a much higher degree of precision needed in the construction of the driver's motor.
The difference between Sensitivity and Efficiency: The former is 2.83Volts at one meter. The latter is 1 watt 1 meter. If the speaker is 8 ohms the two are the same. If we take four 8 ohm drivers that are 87dB and put them in parallel, the load is now 2 ohms. The sensitivity is increased by 6dB; 93dB doesn't sound too bad. But that is 2.83volts into 2 ohms; when you do the math that is 4 watts. If you put 1 watt into that same array you'll still get 87dB. A higher efficiency driver that can make 98dB with 1 watt and is 8 ohms is a different beast altogether. This describes the 15" drivers in my speakers at home and they cost $2000.00 each.
You can find 15" drivers that cost $200.00. I'd be very interested to learn of a 15" with the same 22Hz free air resonance and 150 watt power handling that cost $200, or even $600.00. Have at it! But I think you'll find that such simply does not exist.