I see a lot of good comments here I'd like to "multi-quote" and add here, but I guess we don't have that option on this board.
First, thank you for the comment on the table. It was over a year planning and building. Tyhe wood plinth (which is Ebony veneer, but does look a bit like Zebrawood) came from Moldova. I then did quite a bit of modifications myself to it.
The platter and sub-platter come from South America. Arm is Rega, so UK origin.
The aluminum constraind layer sub-plinth is my design and manufactured here in CT by an Aerospace machine shop. The rubber sheet in the "sandwich" was water-jet cut to my drawing here in CT. Same with the power switch/level bezel (level is back-lit when power is on). Dust cover is Rega UK- recycled. Fasteners are US made I'm reasonably sure. I used 4-40 button head cap screws for bezel and logo, and 10-32 low head cap screws for the sub plinth construction/attachment. Brass inserts in the wood plinth for all the fasteners are US made I'm reasonably sure (I honestly wasn't focused on that when finding the right parts). Motor is original but from Premotec; I believe... Belgian?
But the Levis analogy- yeah. And I've looked into getting a few pair of Selvage jeans from Japan. I think if you simply adjust for inflation, the pricing is not out of line at all, from 1980 Levis. But I haven't checked. Problem is I'll still ruin them, and I buy my jeans at the thrift store these days!
Assuming you are making more than one drum, billet hoops would not be too bad. It would be run on a CNC machine (probably Japanese origin machine!) and the more you do, the less that cost. Start with a pipe, not a solid round bar, to reduce waste (although smaller hoops could be made from the drops). It requires good planning and utilization of respurces, but it's possible to keep pricing "reasonable" but it would still be above DW with their mass-produced cheap lug castings etc.
(I will say that I liked the old "jazz" drums DW made before buying the Gretsch name. Maybe Gretsch are the same shells but I don't know.) I think DW is on par with any premium drum, say the Recording Custom (now made in Taiwan) or even the PHX (made in Japan still). When the Stage Custom Birch line came out, I told my bass player to buy them for his daughter (and he did) they are the same shell technology and construction as RC, but made in Taiwan. Just change the heads to USA Remo heads and you cannot tell them apart sonically. Yamaha figured that out for themselves (or it was a test to see how they did) and re-badged those shells with a nicer finish, and those are current RC drums too...