I don't have an opinion on whether the boycott is a good or bad idea as I am thousands of miles away. I only can offer an observation.
What you are going through now happened to us here in the States 10-15 years ago. At various times in my life you'd judge me as being middle-class or upper-middle-class, bar for a couple of frightening years when my business collapsed. When I was young, my parents drove my brother and me 50 miles to see the Red Sox play about 7-8 times a season. But the prices are so high now, I can't justify going more that 3-4 times myself a season. And that's without kids, and I'd have to sit further back than I'd like to feel ok with the ticket price I paid. Then comes ridiculous parking, food and drink prices. As far as NFL games are concerned? Even worse. I don't even contemplate going to New England Patriots games. I don't know how people do it, or what they sacrifice for the privilege of going to a sporting event.
I guess what I'm trying to say is...this is the world we live in now, and it isn't going to get better. I applaud those of you who want to fight for lower prices, I really do. But I don't see how the situation improves.
1. Even worse than in the closed leagues in the US with hardly any competition, the Premier League competes for talent with leagues all over the world. So a top club like Liverpool needs to snatch every pound it can to be able to buy a player before Chelsea, or PSG, or Bayern or Madrid does. (Let's leave the "Liverpool negotiation skills"argument aside for a moment). So as ridiculous as it seems with all the new TV money coming in, Liverpool STILL needs every pound to fight off all the other PL clubs who are getting wads of TV cash now too. Because Arsenal isn't lowering prices, nor United, nor Man City, etc. You risk Liverpool becoming as irrelevant as Aston Villa or Nottingham Forest or Leeds if we let the financial gap widen any further between us and the 4 clubs richer than us in England.
2. The great thing about Liverpool is its huge supporter base. But it's also a bad thing, because if 10,000 of you locals give up your tickets tomorrow your seats won't get cold by the time another 10,000 pay for the spots. Either other locals or once-a decade tourists like me will fill them. And they'll pay the high(er) prices the club burdens them with.
3. The ultimate solution -- which has a 1% chance of ever happening -- is for the major European leagues to join together and agree to price caps on players and tickets. If the Premier League does it alone, the talent will drift to other leagues in search of a bigger payday. Look what Alex Teixeira just did -- he went all the way to China to get his payday FFS.
4. The ugly but realistic solution is tiered pricing in the ground where a percentage of richy-riches pays obscene prices for the best seats, and the working-class people get lower priced tickets but are shifted to less desirable areas of the stand. I know you all hate that idea, but it's what we face in the US. It sucks. And I've chosen -- along with millions of other Americans -- to buy myself a nicer TV instead to follow my team.
I hope somehow, some way, you all get your wish. I hope you get good seats at reasonable prices. I just don't know how it can happen. Good luck.