As i understand it, brass gets warm enough to start to flow when the cartridge is fired. Depending on the the design of the case, it gets deposited in the shoulder of the case. Some case designs get fewer donuts. If enough brass flows forward, some of it deposits at the neck/shoulder junction and forms a ring.
If you cut just a tiny bit into the shoulder, that leaves an area for the brass to flow in to. If that part of the neck doesn't get resized, it shouldn't push the ring back in to the inner diameter of the neck where it would interfere with bullet seating. Inside neck reamers exist but I don't use them and most people probably don't.
Maybe someone will have some pictures of cases that have been cross sectioned to visually show the accumulated brass. I would think any case, at least in theory would get donuts if fired enough times. Longer necks, a longer throat and treating the cases as you describe should hopefully reduce problems. I would say, especially if you consider them when planning your setup, you shouldn't be concerned.