I work as an audio engineer and Tech Director at a local university theater. There, we have a large stash of the venerable Shure SM58 and 57 microphones. You have seen these mics at just about any concert, be it at a church to the top arena rock events. They are bulletproof and an "industry standard" since the 70's. Tech riders ALWAYS ask for them, and you will not find ANY venue with paid musicians without them.
Except, they haven't been made in the US for well over 12 years.
The biggest draw was that it was a quality "US" product... except that the electrics are made partly in China and the mics are actually built in MEXICO! And the price for these are anywhere from $95 to $114 brand new.
But, because of the name, they still sell like mad. Even when myself and other audio engineers have found other mics that sound better and even handle abuse better (Like the GLS ES58/57 from Orange County Speakers) for a third the price, musicians won't touch them. They think that because of the rep, they are still US made and therefore better. Even when you swap out the mic when some aren't looking (which is something I only do on church rental gigs. I would NEVER screw with a pro's rider) and they sound better, they think they're still using a Shure.
The point is that if you don't tell someone where a product is made, and if there is an average level of quality control (not even a great level), people will automatically believe the product is what they THINK it is. They will think that Vespa 150S is made in Italy. They will think their iPhone is made in the US. They will think that their Thinkpad is STILL made by IBM!
It simply depends on how it performs and how it spec's. Not where it's originally from.