kzt wrote:It's not a must, it's a preference.
"We'd like if the crew was smaller. "
"Ok, how much loss of combat power, maintainability or survivability are you willing to accept?"
"None."
Ok, then how much more per ship are willing to spend?"
"None."
"Are you willing for us to spend about 10 years working on a pilot class to see what we can do and how well it works in practice?"
"No."
"Well, then good luck with that."
It is a preference for the navy, its a must for the private sector economy.
If Haven insists on keeping its manageable but suboptimal staffing levels per ship, they will not be able to take advantage of the SEM's focus on rebuilding their infrastructure. That focus will allow Haven a period comparable to post WWII for the USA. The US of the period simply did not have other producers competing for market share for almost 2 decades. They made bank during that period.
The SEM still has some civilian production but they do not have their full capacity to compete against. Not taking as much advantage of it when they can, they won't be able to grow their economy as quickly as they can.
The combination of low wages at Sanctuary and the influx of SEM tech means that replacing their older designs will be cheaper now than they ever will be again. Toss in the increased economic activity from the release crews into the merchant marine and its a real no brainer. This assumes they don't need to expand their fleet in the new geopolitical environment. They actually might need to expand their fleet.