The feedback given by the audits, particularly their failures is presumably meant not to be solely punitive. Instead, its meant to provide feedback as to whether you understanding of the review being done matches that expected.
The boundary between good and bad is nontrivial in many cases and audits provide feedback at scale not available if you don't engage in alternate moderation guidance (Meta, chats etc.)
The review ban part of it is meant, I believe to reinforce that lesson, especially as its easy to get defensive about your wrong review (And I would know. I just got back from a review vacation). Having a period of time to review your decision allows a less emotional evaluation of the question.
So with all that being said, if you were to counter balance the audits and not give out review suspensions, I believe one might be more encouraged to not correctly learn and to ignore wrongly marked reviews.
EDIT:
Looking back at the original question, I see one aspect I haven't addressed, namely, that the failed audit vacation duration be connected in some manner to the number of correct audits.
I believe that this could be effective. Consider the following situation: a reviewer has a 99.5% correct review rate, which corresponds to a 1/200 fail rate or, if they are doing 40 reviews a day, one per work week.
If you assume the absolute worst case scenario, that the one failure is always an audit, under the current system, after a few weeks (I forget the exact escalation algorithm), he will have racked up suspensions on the length of months and will no longer be able to contribute.
I think this is wrong because the ratio of bad questions to good ones is very much against us. We have currently set the sliding scale to the literal absolute extreme in favor of allowing hundreds of bad questions at the cost of one good one (and probably just a grudgingly acceptable one, if there's enough ambiguity to trip up a knowledgeable reviewer)
TLDR: Audits exist for a reason and are a fundamentally important tool in keeping moderation quality high, but maybe the suspension duration should be based somehow on number of correct reviews as OP suggested.