This is where I diverge with you -- to put it bluntly, I think the 076 is intended to be capable of enabling and conducting amphibious operations in a high intensity conflict beyond the first island chain.
In that kind of mission profile, it goes without saying that the 076 will be well supported by a number of carriers, destroyers, submarines, and long range land based aircraft and missiles.
The goal of the 076's fixed wing complement would be to supplement the strike capability and ISR capability of the task force -- the primary purpose of the ship after is deliver troops and materiel onto enemy held islands after their defenses and command/control etc has been sufficiently degraded.
If you're talking about amphibious operations in a high intensity conflict beyond the First Island Chain, you're basically looking at Guam or another of the Marianas islands.
But for the next 15 years, there won't be anywhere near enough large carrier decks or carrier aircraft to obtain local air superiority for a successful amphibious operation.
Unless of course, there is a truly huge acceleration from current Chinese military spending levels.
Whilst that is a possibility given a China-US cold war, it still doesn't change the fact that air superiority is a prerequisite to a successful amphibious operation. So resources are better devoted to air control capabilities first, rather than to amphibious assault capabilities in secondary areas.
Anyway, I think we'll just have to wait and see what comes out of the shipyards.
I think the key metrics will be the number of catapults and the deck layout, which will show the actual balance between air control versus amphibious assault capability.