I respectfully disagree. What has been happening is a few rock stars will take most of the work and the work left over other photographers can't make a living with. What makes is worse are the new photographers trying to get work by charging below their value. That's why I quit being a pro when digital cameras brought more photographers into the field.
So you say you disagree, but you wholeheartedly agree?
A field dominated by a few "rockstars" as you put it, is not a field with much stability or staying power.
It's not something permanent I think. I'm not a total naive pessimist and cynic.
But there has been a tremendous cheapening of photography recently, in the last twenty years or so, due to digital and especially smartphones.
The reputation of the whole field is running on fumes really.
Everybody and their mother thinks they can ride with the best, because of infinite retries and cheap paste-pot effects.
In the same way everybody thinks they are a qualified art critic ("you can't discuss taste" and other idiotic platitudes).
If I had a krone for every time I heard someone say "I just want a camera that can blur the background", because that was the main thing they had noticed from more expensive cameras, I'd have two or three-hundred kroner, at least.
And that is from people who should really know better.
If that is the extent of peoples grokking of photography in general, I'm at the same time elated and tired to the point of needing a nap, because there is a lot of work cut out for us to make it clear to people what they really like, in their heart of hearts, but can't express with words or internal reasoning.