"There is one potential downside to a vapor barrier other than cost. Since a vapor barrier will block bleed water from going into the soil, you may see more of it on the surface."
Actually there are other downsides. it affects the curing process, uneven curing through out the slab.
ACI 302.1R-96
Guide for Concrete Floor and Slab
Construction
Reported by ACI Committee 302
"Concrete placed in direct contact with a vapor barrier or
vapor retarder exhibits significantly larger longitudinal di-
mensional changes in the first hour after casting than does
concrete placed on a granular base6 ; there is also more verti-
cal settlement. Where reinforcing steel is present, settlement
cracking over the steel is more likely because of the in-
creased vertical settlement resulting from a longer bleeding
period. If the concrete is restrained by connecting members,
base friction, or reinforcement, shrinkage cracking is more
likely because the concrete placed directly on a vapor barrier
or vapor retarder retains more mixing water and thus shrinks
more. In one study, high-slump concrete placed directly on
plastic sheets exhibited significantly more cracking than
concrete placed on a granular base. 7
Surface crusting is also more likely for slabs placed direct-
ly on a vapor barrier or vapor retarder. Concrete that doesn’t
lose water to the base won’t stiffen as rapidly as concrete that
does. If the surface crusts over due to drying or to faster set-
ting caused by solar heat gain, the weight of a power float or
trowel could crack the crusted surface covering a softer layer
of concrete that hasn’t lost water. On-site conditions such as
low humidity, moderate-to-high winds, use of embedded
mineral-aggregate or dry-shake surface hardeners, or a com-
bination of these can aggravate the problem and increase the
likelihood of cracking.6,8"
It is extra work but a thin layer of sand or crushed stone over a thick vapor barrier, wetted just before the pour is the best practice. The vapor barrier must be designed/installed to exclude the entrance of ground water/moisture between the barrier and concrete after the pour or curing process. This was required on large building foundations I worked on in Manhattan NYC.