Yes, no question about it.
Ticket prices are headed up, and that's the way it is. Is Disney pricing out their core market? Maybe. I am amazed when I look at some people's signatures and see how many times they have stayed on-site! I mean, for me, dw, and 3 dc, 5 nights in a Contemporary Tower and 5-day (non plus) hoppers? Yikes! It must be $3000, and that's before food. Disney clearly feels they can continue to charge what I consider to be
incredible prices on their lodging, so they apparently have no issues there with pricing out their market.
Disney understands that many people may only want to "check it out." That's why they are willing to nail you for $65 for one day, and they can get that price. They also understand very few people will take the time to do 10 park days on a trip, so they make those last 5 days pretty cheap (unless you want to use them more than 2 weeks later!) IMO, Disney is trying to encourage "immersion" in their parks and their culture with this pricing arrangement.
Yes, USF/IOA is a lot cheaper. A 2-park annual pass is only $120 plus tax; the equivalent WDW pass is $415! Short period admissions are a little cheaper too.
Few people want to vacation at WDW the way my family does

, but here's what we do. We will buy an AP in Jan 2007, and use it for the 8 days we are in Orlando. We will also visit sometime during the spring or summer, again maybe in the fall, and again just before they expire in Jan 2008. Then we will go a year WITHOUT (easy folks - we can handle it!

) and do it all over again starting in Jan 2009. So, for our family, we get unlimited visits over two winter vacations for $221 per person per year after tax, plus additional visits in between as we please. We get 25 or more days out of our APs, making our daily cost $17.68. Not everyone wants this kind of WDW overload, but we love it.

The year off makes us all the more anxious to go back. Take a look at my trip countdown in my signature!
I'd buy the 10-day hopper plus with no expiration and use it over 3 or 4 years, but that's just my thinking. That will cost between $100 and $130 per year per person. Yes, laying out $1800

on the front end is painful, but it will pay off over the time you use the tickets.
Tim, who doesn't mind being labeled a WDW maniac!
