German women running them.
Richard Overy and Adam Tooze have both written on how the bombing surveys got this wrong. Germany already had as high a rate of female work in 1939 as the UK and US in 1944. The statisticians looked only at the change once the war actually broke out, and also misread the "servants" category in the census which included farms and small businesses. Can't run double or triple shifts without the workers (hence why so much foreign labour imported later on).
More generally Germany was trying to rebuild a war machine from basically nothing post-Versailles (not just factories but barracks and airfields) with tiny natural resources and population compared to the British (or even French) Empire, US or USSR (hence massive investments in synthetic oil and rubber). Once the war started she had no Lend-Lease and had to pay for very limited imports from allies & neutrals (admittedly looting the occupied territories helped, but you can only do that once and they didn't have everything).
Even more than the American thread the resources here are constrained, by hard physical rather than political facts. And we are not trying to fine tune a winning strategy but fix a hopelessly losing one. So you have to be very specific how much hindsight are you willing to assume and what are you trying to achieve.
- BoB - maybe more 109s with drop tanks let you win air superiority over SE England, but to what end unless you want to invade, which most people think was impossible? (And let's say you pull it off, it's not so easy to sucker punch Stalin next year, so Barbarossa just got even harder.)
- Blockade of British Isles - could help with night bombing & mining of ports, long range recon, but mainly down to U-boats.
- Barbarossa - as argued, you need both large numbers of longer-ranged bombers and a big advance on land to bomb the Urals, what do you want less of?
BTW although WW2 Germany generally has a bad reputation for mass production, the 109 at least is an exception.
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