At the NFFC convention in July, they had a seminar with Becky Carter and Jim Dergin. At that time I expressed my concern that pin prices were too high to attract new fans (and keep collectors). I was concerned because at DL the attraction pins used to be $6 - $6.50 pins, but then 2000-2001 attraction pins were $10.50 (but they were 3-D

) and now the newer attraction pins are only $8.50 but they are LE. I wondered and still do, how this is supposed to be good for the hobby? I wonder how many people here were pulled in buy picking up a pin here and there with favorite character, hotel you stayed at and FAVORITE ATTRACTION? Thank goodness WDW still has nice $6.50 pins.
Anyway the response was: they are simply responding to their guests who want more bells and whistles on their pins and more LE pins, and of course those things cost money! I don't know about the rest of you, but I would much rather have a $6.50 "simple but pretty" pin, than one that lights-up, opens up and costs $18.
The cynical side tells me that Disney knows they can add a "feature" that adds 10% to the cost of the pin, but is something they can sell for double the price. The problem with adding features is even if the cost is justified by increased manufacturing costs, the price eventually gets to a point were few people can afford it. $6 or $8 pins were attractive because they fit in the classification of a "cheap souviner" but at $15.50 or $18, that = character breakfast or other neat vacation addition.
Of course when the market dies out, the answer from Disney will be "people just aren't interested" instead of "maybe people don't want to regularly spend $10.50 or more on pins, lets try working on our $6.50 or $8.50 pins for awhile."