There's a few reasons for this. Spencer nailed one of them quite well - if you appreciate having them, they're awesome - and if you don't, you generally don't mind them. They don't cost anything but some scheduled tasks to run.
Meta Stack Overflow used to be its own site, not a per-site meta, so the need for them initially was the same need that they serve on any other main site. Some of it is for incentive for users to try different features, some of it is for users to set longer-term goals, and we also now unlock additional privileges based on badges that you've earned (the dupehammer being one).
To remain as consistent as possible (given that Meta Stack Exchange exists and is a parent site, not a child meta), and to make sure new abilities based on badges also apply to meta sites, it just makes sense to keep them. I'm extremely pleased with how the dupehammer has worked, and I'd like to find new things that participation badges can grant.