I don't buy it. From my limited experience in dall sheep hunting, only 50% of the cost is the hunt. The other 50% is the Guide Annoyance Fee. It kicks in sometime between day 2 and day 5. Day 1, the client is still euphoric from the flight in and is probably still well rested from the snuggly hotel bed he or she snored in last night.
Then it happens. The guide goes from being the source of knowledge and wisdom straight to the great mountain ombudsman (AKA complaint department). We flatland whiners start a downpour of my feet hurt, my pack doesn't fit right, you didn't say it would be this steep, my silly expensive clothes didn't actually make me perform or look anything like Cam Hanes, where is my sheep, and why the hell won't it stop raining???????????
Or you could look at other hunts and see how the cost structures are very similar. A good backcountry elk hunt for 7 days will run $6500-7000 in the lower 48. Add in the higher cost of fuel, food, and most everything else in Alaska, and consider that sheep hunts are 10-12 days hunting plus 2 travel days and you are looking at very similar per day pricing. Every state is money hungry for guide permits, outfitter licenses, taxes, fees, etc.
Sheep hunts take up a lot of time. Even if you kill early, the guide can't just jump to a new client and make some bank. He just gets to rest for a few until the next out of shape sheep dreamer arrives in a flying aluminum tube.
Jeremy