If the choice is a low cost EM overcurrent vs. a higher cost EM differential and there aren't going to be performance issues then the EM overcurrent makes sense, in that environment. Those were the "well, it reclosed, everything's ok" days. Now we have a compliance obligation to know that every operation is correct. There's also been a transition from (before my time) where stuff seemed to be expensive and personnel time inexpensive to where stuff is less expensive and personnel time is more expensive. So if a more expensive relay requires less time figure out what happened that's a good thing.
That may be a bit simplified, but 20 years ago we'd pick just the "right" relay for the application and have lots of different relays to purchase, design around, and maintain spares for. Now it's believe to be less costly to have as few different designs as possible and some applications get a design that would have been considered gross overkill 20 years ago. Part of it is compliance obligations, part of it is simply trying to get more out of each protection engineer than 20 years ago and there's no time to "optimize" each design, nor do we see the point.
I'd much prefer to get really good at a handful of standard designs, portions of which may be omitted at any given location, than to come up with just the right design every time.
So, if I need a full out low impedance bus diff design I see absolutely no value in also having an overcurrent based design. Would an overcurrent relay work some places? Sure, undoubtedly; but the savings would be illusionary.