It isn't better. It is a matter that admitting to its use is a lot easier than explaining why it isn't necessary. Here is the reason why it isn't better.
The subwoofer's amplifier is a one channel amplifier. All inputs are summed into a single input before the preamplification stage. A "Y" cable causes the incoming signal to be split, thereby reducing its signal strength and making it more susceptible to RF and magnetic interference. However, if excellent quality cable is used this should have a very, very small, probably inperceptible effect. After the split, the signal has to be summed again. There may be a slight signal loss if the Y connectors are off in length, capacitance, conductance, resistance but with good connections and excellent cable, the loss is not significant and can only be measured by silicon life forms and not by carbon units...ha, ha!
The best way to get the signal from a receiver's LFE (low frequency effects) RCA output to a subwoofer's amplifier is with high end signal cable. Cable rated for digital transmission has very high standards (almost no interference whatsoever) in its shielding and makes an excellent analog subwoofer transmission line. However, when digital transmission lines get long (5+ meter) it gets expensive. The Aperion aluminum and copper shielded subwoofer cable is a quiet and economically practical and excellent cable as long as strong RF and magnetic sources are avoided by several inches.
The receiver manufacturers know what they are doing. They have extracted the LFE and BASS information, usually through an excellent digital preamplification section, and summed it, in digital, to the LFE output before it is converted to analog at the final step.
The subwoofer amplifier manufacturers provide dual inputs in case you have an older amplifier or receiver, or an inexpensive late model receiver, that does not sum the LFE/BASS to a single RCA output.
It might occur to some sharp stereophiles: how does the RF and magnetic interference issue apply to the Aperion Towers that have a powered sub in them and have no allowance for signal cable? The answer is that with 12 guage OFC wire and the high current of a full range audio signal with bass, the wire creates its own electromagnetic environment. As long as the speaker cables are not run under a refrigerator compressor or a washer's motor or near an oil furnace's high voltage apparatus the high current that is inherent to a full range signal arrives at the speaker and subwoofer amplifier unaffected by minor background RF and electromagnetic fields.
How much can a 12 guage wire handle? About 2400 watts continuously with excellent connections. Heavy guage OFC wire is extremely important to amplifier/receiver dynamic range and the performance of the speakers. Sure 22 guage will do, but the dynamics will suck and a really powerful amplifier might actually melt the line..good!
Soooo... buy the best cable to make the connection and don't worry about the subwoofer cable being less expensive. Its not "cheap" by any means, just not rated for digital transmission over its length. But it is excellent analog cable and very, very quiet. The cable that a bass guitarist uses to get the microphone signal from the guitar to a bass amplifier is very similar in construction and that signal is much less than a receiver's LFE/BASs connector.