This is pretty much an expected result. The link between the Core die and IO die only writes at 16B/cycle, so you will see half the bandwidth that the 2000/1000 series hand. Also, because the IO and core dies are now separate, there is added latency when communicating with RAM, as the signal now has to pass from the core die to the IO die, and then to memory.
All the single chiplet Ryzen 3000 series chips have this lower write speed. The double chiplet versions (3900X and 3950X) are not affected, as they have two chiplets which can pass data to the IO die simultaneously.
In reality, this won't really affect performance much, as the 3000 series double the available L3 cache to compensate for the higher memory latency. The system will read/write from RAM far less often, so you have a net performance gain.