More or less because it doesn't matter. That said, there are examples of non-baseband (DC-balanced or AC coupled) codes, which are used in various applications. Typically these are where galvanic isolation is desirable (Ethernet for example), or where DC isn't transmitted at all by the medium (like magnetic storage media, or radio as such).
I suppose the signals to/from a hard disk head might be a questionable example, as they're not really modulated for sake of the short transmission line between head and head amplifier, heh. But these have used Manchester coding (FM, MFM) for example, with modern examples using more advanced codes. (10BASE-T Ethernet is also Manchester encoded.)
The ratio of bandwidth to center frequency generally depends on the medium. Wire transmission line generally has excellent bandwidth, including down to DC, so it's fine to use broad/base-band signals, like UART, with it. Likewise, AC-coupled signals like Ethernet use quite wide bandwidth (roughly 100kHz to 100MHz), just cutting out the bottom [DC to 100kHz] to allow transformer coupling so you don't have to worry about hazardous voltages on the cable between sites (ground loop, lightning induced surge, etc.).
For lower quality and longer distance lines (particularly those that might be spliced, run through various environments, subject to corrosion, etc., like phone lines), typically a multi-band approach is used. Frequency-division multiplex (FDM) divides the medium's total bandwidth into channels, which may only be usable up to some bitrate each, but by collecting many together into a single link, total bandwidth can be optimized. This includes modern longish-distance high-speed links like DSL and DOCSIS, and older back-haul links like phone trunking lines (where the channels are individual 3kHz phone lines).
For serial/UART traffic, isolation generally isn't required, and at typical low bitrates, cheap optical isolator devices are sufficient (like with MIDI).
Which, optical isolation can be considered an application of modulation itself: the light, though incoherent, is still amplitude-modulated by the signal, and an incoherent detector (photodiode/transistor) suffices to demodulate it.
Bandwidth is one of the limitations of UART style signals, though, and along with typical signaling standards like RS-485, distance is typically limited to a few km. With repeaters or hubs, line loss can be mitigated, but one may well desire a more effective coding scheme over such distances.