I think the article makes some useful points, particularly about the relative role of loudspeakers vs. everything else in determining the overall performance of an audio system. Also, great points about how common sense often gets tossed by the wayside, such as when people expect small woofers (even very good ones) to get low AND play orchestral-scale dynamics. Three constructive criticisms.
First, you didn't put the number one easy visual cue to see if a loudspeaker maker/marketer cares about high-fidelity reproduction and has the technical competence to effect it:
Do they make extensive use of "toppled-MTM" center channels throughout their lineup? If so, say thank you and move on to a more serious firm. As
Audiohoiics has previously published, such designs have no place anchoring the center of a music lover's system.
Second, I think it would be helpful to give a little bit of material about what to look for on the
outside of the box from a sonic perspective, such as flush-mounting of woofers, gentle transitions between cabinet surfaces (curves, roundovers, etc.) to lower diffraction, and means of matching the directivity of the tweeter and the next driver down.
Third, I think the part about China is not only out of the scope of the rest of the article, but also simply wrong on fact.
Fact of the matter is, the "China price" has led to much better-quality speakers at lower prices for everyone. Let me give you an example of two entry-level bookshelf speakers from KEF, the British-made Q15 from ~1997 and the Chinese-made Q-Compact from ~2005. The speakers had a few things in common. They both sounded very good for the price, because of the sophisticated Uni-Q drive-unit and technically competent crossover design. End-user cost was also similar, though the later Q-Compact might have been ~$50/pr cheaper or thereabouts. Bass extension and output were even surprisingly similar, though the smaller Q-Compact did have lower efficiency. But in terms of parts quality, the Chinese speaker makes its old British ancestor look cheap.
Cabinet-wise, there is simply no comparison.
The old Q15 used cheap pressboard in a simple box, except for the baffle, which was a flimsy ribbed plastic piece and simply press-fitted onto the front of the box. (My old ones fell apart a few times, and I ended up gluing the baffles on.) There was a lone pressboard horizontal shelf brace.
The Q-Compact's cabinet was a finer (less grainy-looking) pressboard, molded into a curved shape. The baffle was part of this molding, and there was a plastic trim ring around the Uni-Q to hide the basket and lower diffraction. (Yes, that allowed them to save costs by not painting the basket black or sculpting its rim for lower diffraction.)
As for a comparison of the drivers, let's look at the two of them and see which one hits more of the "good" traits discussed in the article:
Made-in-UK Q15 (1997) driver:
Pressed steel basket, no ventilation under the spider, relatively small windows under the cone.
Made-in-China Q-Compact (2005) driver:
Rigid cast alloy basket with under-spider ventilation and much less reflective area behind the cone, also (not visible) a motor with a Faraday ring inside for lower distortion.
Besides, the simple fact of the matter is, American production fell by the wayside long ago. But American companies were defeated by white people, not Asians: American firms by and large weren't' able to compete with the
Scandinavians, not the Chinese. Long before the Chinese entered their picture, American companies looking for high-qualtiy OEM drivers went to Peerless, or Seas, or ScanSpeak, or Vifa, and so on. (Or, outside of Scandinavia, to Audax in France, Eton in Germany, and so on.)
Furthermore, if you want to talk about statist/corporatist policies affecting the loudspeaker industry, there's a better example than China much closer to home. The
Canadian government made audio research a priority (makes sense, lots of timber in Canada that could be profitably turned into loudspeakers) and highly subsidized the NRC. Where would Paradigm, PSB, the former API companies, etc. be without that statist interference from the Canadian government? (And can we all collectively say "thank you" to Canada for that?)