In a hunting rifle with more than .003" chamber neck clearance, NO. You would see no benefit UNLESS it was a genuine .25MOA or better shooter.
If this was the case, just a skim cut to get uniform thickness would only need to be done to improve uniform neck tension and annealing of the necks every other firing. I anneal after firing and before sizing.
In my comp rifles, I used to run neck turn only chambers, but often with certain powder/bullet combo's I would get pressure problems from carbon rings/fouling, or whatever you want to call it, and then would be chasing my tail trying to overcome this. Very distressful to have this happen in the middle of a match.
After testing a barrel or 2 with larger clearance, going from .0015" to .003" or .004" total clearance, I found no negative issue on target and the pressure problems vanished. I still have to neck turn to clean up the neck thickness and clearance, but my aggregates have not changed.
Neck turning is like sizing, there are a million different views and none are incorrect.
Some turn well into the shoulder, some turn part of the neck length and others turn all of the neck length
I have a custom 22-250AI Model 700 VSSF II that is still less than .5MOA without turning Lapua SR brass, but will print into .2's with a skim cut than it is so easy to tune that it shoots just about any combo exceptionally well. Some rifles are just flukes.
Hope this helps.
Cheers.