The are still the same meter manufactured by DER EE (not DER). I don't think they would downgrade it under their own name.
IET did not manufacture the IET DE-5000 (or DE-6000), DER EE did.
While DER EE manufactured it for IET, IET could have asked for tighter quality than what DER EE is doing now. How good a reputation DER EE is wanting compared to IET?
The missing and changed components in DE-5000 is not about what I (or you or anyone) thinks, it is pretty much a fact, based on what people have found inside in different units. Whether those differences count as "downgrade" or "inferior" is another thing.
The first example are the supply input "protection" diodes. That is, imho originally slightly badly designed thing, they could clamp to low enough voltage and to break to (hopefully) short if a battery or DC-input was connected the wrong way, and thus (hopefully) save the rest of circuitry, though still needing a repair for the broken diode. But my unit had no such diode at all for battery, only the unpopulated pads for it, and the DC input side diode had been moved to replace a larger bulk supply capacitor (the spot still having capacitor markings!). The battery diode certainly does not break now, but it won't be saving the rest of the circuitry, either. I think that counts as a minor downgrade; failure result changed from "potentially slightly broken with easy fix" to "totally broken". (The DC input "protection" diode was also changed to a larger one, I'm not sure that was a good idea, either.)
The following example is something I don't know if it is a change or was it always so: missing capacitors on supply rails (which has been measured to have quite some ripple without those caps), only unpopulated pads waiting. At least that does not improve anything. So, if that was a change done after IET times, that is likely also a minor downgrade. (Whether that brings it out of spec is something I can not say.)