... okay, but none of that supports your original assertion that producing destroyers at three shipyards is "almost certainly" due to the economic situation and not related to the Chinese Navy's operational or strategic needs.
The way you said that the purchase was not related to the Navy's needs implied that they were building more ships only for the sake of giving shipyards work, and that the Navy would not be able to effectively absorb the new construction and integrate them into their order of battle.
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Of course, my belief is that the Navy's plan was always to broaden construction of destroyers among more shipyards -- to not only provide more competition among the shipyards and prevent monopolies, but also to provide redundancy in case one shipyard goes under or even comes under attack. Of course, the benefit of having multiple shipyards work on destroyers simultaneously also means they can commission more destroyers per year as well, assuming they've financially planned for it.
The same goes for the 056s, though being smaller ships they can be built at far smaller yards.
Doesn't it? And I never said creating work for the shipyards was the ONLY consideration, just the primary for extending the construction to a 3rd yard.
What needs do you see the PLAN having, that is so urgent as to justify them needing to have three yards working near full tilt simultaneously to meet right now just for DDGs?
All that about encouraging completion and building strategic redundancy was already met with two yards able to build 052Ds, what extra benefit does adding another yard bring to the table in that regards? Especially when we consider the fact that the 055 is just around the corner, if it hasn't started building already?
The overlap in building of 052C2 and 052D DDGs was already a good illustration of planning and organisation that does not really fit with the meticulous standards we have come to expect of the PLAN.
Chinese naval modernisation is a long term project expected to take decades to come to full fruition.
What we are witnessing now is a full tilt sprint that is almost certainly unsustainable in the long term, and I just don't seem any pressing operational or strategic needs that would justify the extra expense such a rapid build up is costing China and the PLAN.
The only way that makes sense is if the decision wasn't purely based on PLAN operational needs or strategic plans.
But, it's not like they are building a million life rafts or other stuff of no real operational value.
These are world class destroyers that any navy would be pleased to get, so it's a good problem for the PLAN to have at the end of the day.
They will easily and happily adjust their plans and resourcing to accommodate and make best use of all the additional ships they are getting.
My argument is that they never planned on getting so many ships, and they would not have done if not for the global economic downturn killing the civilian shipping demand.