When I decided to first get a pair of good speakers and eventually settled down to the Vandys, it was because of the retail prices in India which were US MRP plus freight, duties, taxes, margins etc. Directly buying from abroad was no loss as long as one is prepared to pay the freight and duties. In my case, the Customs even added up a penalty/fine as I am not a businessman with import license, so ended up paying more than 100% of the speaker value towards all other costs. For example, the 2Ce Signature price was around $1,500 when I bought it directly from Vandersteen's international dealer, and I ended up spending more than that towards freight, duties etc. With the then exchange rate of around 40, it was totally around Rs 1.3k. Now, when someone offers me Rs 30k, why I should sell? Somewhere around 50% of what I spent can make me consider.
The same reason I bought directly from Vandersteen USA the Quatros. How many people know of the pains and costs involved in getting such heavyweight stuff all the way from USA to our homes?
Another classical example is the Marantz AV7005 processor I am contemplating to buy. I can get it for around $1,300 (now it is replaced with AV7007) outside and even if I pay around 35% duties and carry it with me to India, it comes less than the best offer I so far got from local dealers in India (Rs 1.1L).
In my experience, getting stuff directly from abroad and bringing then legitimately is what I follow. Of course, it all depends on one's views and principles in life, taking shortcuts etc.
Last, when I spend my own hard-earned money on some stuff I want to enjoy, I don't believe in the 'desi' idea. It is a global marketplace now and noone stops.
Then there are people who never mind spending lavishly for changing cellphones every 6 months but keep on arguing on hifi stuff for saving Rs 1000 here and there. I am not in that category. I still use an old version cellphone, more than enough to send and receive calls and messages, and never feel like changing.
cheers.
murali