No kidding. I find some pretty awesome deals at goodwill, they have plenty of new dress clothes donated from normstroms, boston store, jcpenny, and kohls. I never have to pay more than 3.99 for a new dress shirt, and most still have tags on them, the ones that don't I don't care because I'm not a snobby rich girl. I'm glad I was raised as a simple guy.
I don't know about elsewhere, but Kohl's here is pretty cheap to begin with...they don't really have major labels there though. Dockers and Levi's are the level of gear. Don't get me wrong though, I love Kohl's esp since for every $50 you usually get back $10 even on sale items.
JCPenney is almost my exclusive dress clothing store. Their Stafford suits have come down in quality since the 90's when they were lined much nicer and a better fabric weight, yet still offer a lot of value in a ready to wear suit. Their shirts have actually gotten better over time with more cuts and styles available. I never liked the Van Heusen line except for the occasional 'bright' party shirt I'd just wear for an evening. For office clothing this is my main staple (and actually my second credit card behind Sears way back 20+ years ago)...I can show up there and put together a full week's wardrobe easily.
Not sure about today, but their Stafford Executive shoes were Johnston and Murphy's high end at about $50-100 cheaper than the full-branded ones. I still have my original two pairs and they look like new. They have been resoled like 3-4 times now over a period of 4-5 years of daily use and another 7 or so light use.
Nordstroms is expensive for the most part..sales rock their. They are less full-cater than they used to be, but still a great place to score value.
Macy's is a place I hate to store normally, but their sale racks can provide good items.
In general, all these decent places with sales are hit or miss. You definitely couldn't put together a full week of clothing with all first pick choices.