It highlights the perverse financial incentive you're talking about, with regards to how perinatal services are underwritten and delivered.
Plus it presents a fairly impressive case - based on physiology, biochemistry, etc. - for how labor induction and other obstetrical interventions actually compromise the health and bonding of mom and baby.
(I'm on the fence about the latter.. since, historically, many of these interventions were developed so that less women/babies would die during childbirth. But their commercial exploitation is a separate topic, I suppose.)