Re: the 57-52, it still has no overheads and no snare mic, so it's only a partial kit for that price.
Re: the PG kit, you're still short a snare mic and you probably eventually decide to replace all of the mics with something better, so in the long term, it probably doesn't make much sense.
I'd pick and choose. Get some stuff that you'll keep forever and fill in the gaps with cheap stuff that you'll eventually replace.
1. Get an
AKG D112 (or a
Shure Beta 52A if you prefer) for kick. Do NOT under any circumstances succumb to the temptation to buy a
Nady DM90 kick mic.
2. Get a couple of inexpensive SDCs. You'll eventually want to upgrade them to get better low end response, but a couple of
Nady CM90 mics will do reasonably well for overheads for now as long as you have a decent kick mic. The
CM88 pair costs less, but I've never tried it, so I can't give any advice there. Since it's a long-term-throwaway part, you should probably go with the cheaper ones.
3. Get a three pack of
AKG D2300S mics for tom. Not as good a deal as when I was paying $5-10 apiece of them, but still a good deal, IMHO. Don't use them on snare. Too muddy. The sound is a little heavy, but it balances out the lack of low end on
the CM90 pair.

You'll probably upgrade these when you upgrade your overheads.
4.
CAD drum clips for toms and snare.
5. Decent snare mic. Some folks like the SM-57. Never liked it, personally. Find yourself a used AKG 190E (thanks, RickW, that mic rocks). Failing that, a
used Unisphere will do.
Total:
$200 - D112 (or $190 for
the Beta 52A)
$100 - Nady CM-90 pair ($80 for a CM-88 pair)
$080 - 3 x D2300S
$080 - 4 x CAD DSM-1
$020 - Used Unisphere
That comes to about $480 ($450), of which $280 ($270) is stuff that should last the rest of your life. The rest is stuff that you'll eventually upgrade.