Why? So they can maintain one layout that "scales" along with your device and make designers happy.
What people implementing "responsive web design" consistently seem to forget, is that not every site is a blog or a company information site, where the visitor wants to read one thing (like the company's address or a single blog post), have that on their screen immediately (barring a "hero image" requiring the visitor to scroll down an entire page to get the blog title in view), read it and then navigate away.
Stack Overflow is a web application, not merely an online portfolio. And my desktop computer screen is not a frigging tablet. I am not touching my screen with fingertips covering 5% or more of it, holding a six-ish inch display two feet from my face.
My monitor is a massive 24, 27 or 32 inch surface suspended right in front of my face, and I use a mouse cursor the size of a few pixels to navigate. I do not need buttons or clickable surfaces that are larger than the banana lying below my monitor. I can perfectly read letters that are 10-12px large. 15 is on the high side.
I've said it before on Spotify's forum. Spotify has unified their web, mobile and desktop apps into one, hoisting the same layout system (and changing the CSS classes with each release, the bastards, so Spicetify keeps breaking as well), angering more and more users:
Please, please, please stop this "responsive design" madness that has inhabited the web and now is creeping onto the desktop thanks to Electron, PWA, SPA, and whatnot. I have literally millions of pixels to spare on my 2560x1440 monitor, the Spotify Desktop app on Windows taking up half of that, a what do I get on my home screen?
TWELVE (12) tiles with shortened titles and ellipsised descriptions, because, well, responsive and margins and stuff.
This is a 27 inch monitor (not Patrick) that's capable of displaying a full page or over a hundred of lines of very readable text in my word processor, IDE and browser. This is a computer monitor, not a tablet or smartphone. This "responsive" scaling fad is unintuitive and ridiculous and needs to go away, fast.
I do not know a single person that likes this ten foot user interface design for the desktop web, nor do I know a single person that likes to get RSI because they have to scroll up and down all day to read information that used to perfectly fit on one page.
If you're a designer and you do, ask another person.
Update 2022-05-13: I hardly ever log in anymore, but when I did, I got surprised with this view:
There's no readable or actionable content in the entire center of the screen, which also appears to have been narrowed even more than before. Still not a fan.