Largely this. The emphasis is on cheaper ingredients which naturally will lead to poorer quality. I've also noticed a bait-and-switch tactic at work the past few years. A new place comes along with promising food, and within 6 months menu items disappear or are changed drastically. Let's look at just one resort with which I'm familiar: Wilderness Lodge. When Geyser Point opened, they had a unique breakfast menu with two types of eggs benedict among other items. Those were soon dropped, the menu scaled back in other areas. Then, they stopped serving hot breakfast. Then, they just stopped breakfast altogether. For the regular menu, they had a great salmon sandwich--gone in about 4 months despite its seeming popularity. About that same time, Roaring Fork--which had above average QS food and the best Mickey waffles at Disney as they were made-to-order with fresh sauces--was closed for renovation. When they reopened, gone was the freshness and the quality--the waffles are mass produced and the sauces gloppy. Most of their really good sandwiches also disappeared. Whispering Canyon? They changed the skillets lately, I've read, and now corn bread is an extra charge? Finally, Artist Point. Aside from the fact they changed it entirely away from Signature dining (so now no really nice place to go for an adult meal), and the veal shank from opening is now a pork shank--far cheaper that way as is the entire menu since it's all made ahead of time, and you're constrained in the appetizers and desserts. Again, it's cheaper that way, though the cost begs to differ. All of this and, yes, prices increasing far beyond the creep of inflation. Of course, that's a Disney-wide strategy.