high end speakers are overpriced


An mdf box with drivers with an acceptable finish can cost as little as a few hundred bucks. elac debut 2 and B&w 607 and dali spektor 2 Q Acoustics 3030i are all a few hundred bucks.

If you replaced the drivers with scanspeak illuminators and added an extra piece or two of mdf for more bracing it would cost only several hundred bucks at most. So the total cost would still only be $1k for state of the art speakers. 

However you find these same drivers in bookshelf speakers costing between 5k to 10k, perhaps even more. 

As you can see, it is perfectly possible to produce state of art speakers for well under $1k. It is greed that excludes many audiophiles from enjoying the beautiful sound quality of these higher quality speakers.

In conclusion, do not buy high end audio again. Just save youre money and make your own, just like Mr Erik squire and others have done. 
kenjit
You seem to think that profit is a dirty word. There is often a large amount of work, R&D, startup costs and risk to bring a product to market. The reward is profit if it succeeds. The risk is financial loss or even catastrophe.

That is true of the cheap speakers I listed at the start of this thread. There is R&D and a large amount of work to bring those to the market. Now take those same products and instead of using drivers that cost $30 you use scanspeaks costing $500. So the price now goes up by $470. However the manufacturers will now charge you an extra few thousand more. This is not justified. It is greed. All the costs you mention had already been accounted for.

No one is forcing you or anyone to buy speakers if they think they are overpriced. And of course, there is arguably overpriced gear out there, and buying used often yields bargains as monied buyers scratch their itches often and sell like-new gear at a deep discount.
The used market is another reason speakers are overpriced. The manufacturers know that the prices will go down on the used market hence they need to start the prices very high to not diminish the perceived value of the goods. Nobody is forcing you to buy overpriced speakers however if you continue to buy overpriced speakers, that will affect the rest of us who want high quality speakers at reasonable prices. The manufacturers will only continue charging us exorbitant prices if people like you consent to it. That is why prices have gone higher and higher over the decades. You are complicit in this.

A good case study is Richard Vandersteen
Thats an example of a speaker that costs a lot of effort to make but you can get superior results for less money using conventional crossovers. Time coherent speakers have never become popular because they dont work. Its a myth. Most speakers arent time coherent and most audiophiles are perfectly happy with that.

Rich people are strange. They want bragging rights so some equipment doesn’t appeal because it’s not expensive enough (which makes them ripe for fleecing)!
And as I have stated they are making prices go higher and higher which makes it harder for ordinary audiophiles to enjoy beautiful sound quality. These ultra high end speakers could be affordable for most audiophiles if they were reasonably priced. Making high quality sound more and more inaccessible to the rest of the public is criminal.

My modest $10,000 audio system (an amount that friends, who think their Bluetooth speaker is fine, think is insane) is a bargain in comparison.

I hope its not an mdf box with drivers in ’em! if so you have been fleeced. Do not be so naive and get yourself a custom tuned system. Your system is mass produced am I right?
Some recent topics from OP. If you go look at them, the details don't vary much.
@hilde45 

What you need to understand is that if you look at the entire speaker industry and the topics you get on this forum, there is no variation there either!

Its the same old wooden boxes with two or three drivers screwed into the box and a small circuit called a crossover inside it. You get folks day in day out asking should i buy a B&w or a dynaudio? its the same old nonsense every day Hilde45. So dont you dare accuse me of being repetitive. I have already elevated myself to the next level of the game which is CUSTOM TUNING. The rest of you are still stuck at the level of buying products that are not custom tuned hence its a compromise.
Speakers are hard to get home for audition. One of the few I was able to get in there was some very highly regarded Vandersteens. Which is redundant, since it seems pretty much all of them are highly regarded. Which certainly was not my experience. The one pair I had cost more than what I had, looked worse than what I had, was built once you looked under the grill rather tacky all of which would be fine if they sounded better, which they did not. My best most reliable audio bud of the time agreed. Detail, dynamics, tone, imaging, you name it, just not there. 

So mark the calendar kenjit, on Vandersteen at least we agree.
Yes they are! But still you have the free will to buy elsewhere. Feeding or not the marketing is up to you. By the way @gs5556 has a point. An other thing -what is fair profit and how do you define it or even ask for it.
G

But still you have the free will to buy elsewhere
no you dont. You could buy a cheaper product but not the same or equivalent speaker for a lower cost. 

Feeding or not the market is up to you.
and if you feed the market you are complicit in the wrongdoing. Boycott the manufacturers and they will have no choice but to lower their prices or go bankrupt. Once the prices become lower, EVERYBODY will be able to enjoy high end speakers not just the elite. Stop arguing and start boycotting.