I would speculate the opposite. The two piece most likely had a slight advantage hence it being present on the earlier models. Likely, later, a bean counter found a way to save Ford a few cents by making a one piece eccentric. Unless, there was a big leap in manufacturing technology which is unlikely as the two piece is nothing more than a smaller one piece eccentric with a second roller wrapped around it. I would venture to say the two piece eccentric exhibits less wear on the eccentric itself as well as the fuel pump actuating arm. Most likely a Ford engineer found through testing and lack of failures that the eccentric and pump arm would survive at an acceptable rate as a one piece unit without the friction reducing outer roller of the two piece design.
I will say with no speculation that the two piece eccentric is and was more expensive to produce.
Respectively, I'll have to disagree.
The one piece eccentric was produced 1962 - 1972 (by Ford), the 2 piece was introduced in 1973. To my knowledge, I could only find a one piece in the world of aftermarket.
Manufacturing one piece versus 2 piece:
The one piece eccentric due to its thickness cannot be stamped - it can be produced either by casting or machining. If done by casting, it will still require some machining on the OD to achieve the surface finish needed (casting finish is fairly rough) and more than likely both holes would be stamped on machined post casting to achieve the size and positioning needed to match the camshaft. If machined only, they would start with a large slug of material and a large percentage of it would be machined away (scrapped), but even the machined away scrap would have to be included in the part cost and the material being used would have to be of high grade to endure the wear in this type application - so, due to expensive material cost, primary casting, machine / stamp as a secondary operation and then finally plating, the one piece (IMO) would be significantly more expensive to produce.
The two piece eccentric would be manufactured from sheet steel stock and stamped (both the inner and outer pieces) - no secondary machining due to the capability of the stamping dies and the outer ring only could be made from the high quality steel and would probably be plated just as the one piece to increase life due to friction / wear. The inner plate could be made from a lesser quality grade of steel due to no contact / no friction.
In my opinion, the conclusion I come up with: even though the 2 piece design has an extra piece, I believe it would be less expensive to manufacture when compared to the one piece eccentric due to: being able to be more diverse in material selection, less secondary operations, less plating applied, less scrap (machining away expensive material).
I believe the two piece eccentric is a better design concerning friction and wear - on the flip side, I believe the one piece design is a more robust / more reliable design because the dowel pin locks the eccentric to the camshaft versus a small stamped tang used on the two piece eccentric.
And as mentioned, I respectfully post this as my opinion and am no way trying to be argumentative - but I do have about 25 years of experience designing similar parts and have worked with hundreds of casting, stamping, machining shops & raw steel suppliers to produce parts in mass production and have tried just about every process when I was under my own strain of reducing costs.
DJs74