If public courses started charging $50 a round here in NE Wisconsin, I think the public golf sector would collapse. Maybe the public sector would consolidate down to about half or less of the courses available now, and that $50 price point would drive number of rounds down considerably to where many course just wouldn't make it.
Tim always says 'people want to play more, not pay more'. How clear can that be? Conversely, people that have to pay more, play less. They want to play more, but they can't /won't just universally pay more. Many will rebel or repel. So, basically golf in the public sector needs to deal with this very simple premise if they want to grow the game. Figure out a way to not have to charge more. Like tone down the extraneous B.S. like lemon scented towels, player assistants from the parking lot to the shower, and sell a golf experience on a course that is designed to operate efficiently on the ground and sell the game, not the flame. Give people golf, not B.S. and marketing.