The App Store runs elevated privileges as do many other parts of the system. Think of a bank, typically anyone can go deposit money in an arbitrary account, but only people with permission to withdraw funds can remove them.
When any account asks to install apps, the system checks the configuration and if allowed, installs them with the permissions programmed into the package - using the App Store app”s elevated privileges, not your account privileges to do the install.
“Why did this ship as a feature?” is harder to answer since computers are designed by many people and they, over time, agree on some ways of setting things up. Your computer could be set up to not even allow non-admin to install apps, so this is more about the convention of default settings being chosen and if you or someone else has modified those default settings. It could be changed so anyone can delete anything in the Applications folder.
Have a look at the permissions on the app or folder and that explains why some users can delete or change it and others cannot.
/Applications
. That's running an uninstaller which most likely is removing files from other (protected) directories (i.e./Library
for example).app
from/Applications