Roger argued that the use of costly boutique parts was often unnecessary, as their claimed superior involved matters unrelated to the part’s function in a particular circuit application, and therefore provided no sonic benefit.
I totally buy this. A great deal of this is driven by armchair buyers who will nit pick relative quality and value based on parts instead of performance.
Of course, a large part of it is manufacturers attempting to make gear to sell specifically in the high end. What if the best sounding amp on earth cost $100 to make? No one would buy it, unless it had meters. Big, beautiful bouncing meters.