ORIGINAL: Andrew Brown
ORIGINAL: msieving1
Up until 1945, the US was building carriers to the limits of its capacity. More carriers could not have been built without sacrificing other types of ships. The ships that were cancelled would not have been available before 1947, at the earliest.
The Essex class CVs built at the end of the war had build times (to commissioning) that were a fair bit longer - months longer - than earlier ships. I don't believe that the USA, late in the war, was incapable of accelerating ship production to match earlier build rates (for Essex CVs) if it really, REALLY wanted to. My opinion about the USA war economy is not that pessimistic.
Andrew
And to add my 2p.... there seems to be a general misconception around here that the US was a boundless cornucopia of war material. It was not.
If I may refer you to Admiral King's Second Report to the Secretary of the Navy covering the period from 1 March 1944 to 1 March 1945. In the Chapter V entitled Fighting Strength, King expresses concerns about the decline in shipyard personnel and the strain it was placing on repairs and building programs. Namely shipyard personnel strength dropped from 970,900 in Jan 1944 to 861,300 in Jan 1945.
Earlier he adds that the ship construction program was under constant review. "The effect of building too many vessels of any particular type would be as serious as building too few, since the construction of unnecessary craft would involve waste of manpower and materials urgently needed for other parts of the war effort."