It's not an entry level product. It's very clearly their top end product. I don't know why people are surprised their highest end product has their highest end price.
Is it a high end product ?
Entry iMac Pro : 8 cores , 32GB ram , Vega56 8GB HBM2. , 1TB SSD
High end iMac : 6 cores ( at higher clock ) , 32GB ram , Vega 20 4GB HBM2 , 1TB SSD
Entry Mac Pro : 8 cores , 32 GB ram , 580x 8GB DDDR5 , 0.256 TB SSD
The Mac Pro isn’t higher in a single one of those categories . None of them . That how is that higher at all ?
The Mac Pro has different stuff out of the core computation and storage space . The last is woefully behind . DDDR5 isn’t a high end option ( it is basically an over locked 3 year old base design . ) . The ram is the same and core count + base clocks are basically a wash .
There are more memory slots . Internal PCI-e slots , but that is more a difference than higher .
The top end BTO goes far higher but that is moving the goal posts a bit . The core issue is where the pricing starts not where it maxes out at. That doesn’t solely rationalize an over 100% increase in entry price since 2013 . The range can be different ,but the whole range doesn’t have to be higher .
It's not going to start at $3000 when the lower end iMac Pro starts at $5000.
OCD rigid price non overlap is something that Apple is mapping on . This is a circular premise , the Mac Pro has to cost more than any other Mac because the Mac Pro has to cost more than any other Mac .
Computational performance wise there is no huge $1000 gap there . For capacity there is no gap at all in terms of an increase . There are value/utility gap in terms of internal expansion that have associated Bill of Material (BOM) costs .
The iMac Pro $5k starting is similar a gimmick of simply just being higher than the previous iMac 27” highest BTO price . It went on a chronic sale after the initial demand bubble expired . The Mac Pro entry price is at least as equally contrived after consuming several glasses of Cupertino kool-aid . ( and Apple shifting product ROI risk onto customers ) . The price is high because Apple wants to get paid no matter how they manage the product line .
IMHO , the Mac Pro entry price is high more so just to make up ground loosing because probably leaving even more folks behind than the Mac Pro 2013 did . Apple is switching demographics of which subsets are being left behind in the ‘ never iMac’ camp.
If Apple added updatable RAM to IMac Pro it would be even worse . ( if they want that product to survive the market competition they’ll have to ) .