As you guys are discussing switchers, would a ground-plane/pour in the top plane be worse than not having it?
As a general rule, no its not bad but may not be good and can be worse. As much as it says it also says nothing... The point being, it depends on the hardware, goals and performance at many levels.
Primarily, you need to look at the currents. If you just pour copper on both sides and connect it at few to several places, then you may introduce ground-loop currents. These would show up as EMI emissions at best and instabilities at worst. You can do "stitching" with many vias to reduce the EMI (as seen in VHF/UHF designs), thereby reducing any potential differences, but if done without any thought, you may introduce odd EMI spikes at various frequencies.
Using a top-side pour is often not helping you very much because all components are already mounted on the top and will radiate regardless of the top-side ground-plane. The bottom ground-plane is specifically to manage DC currents effectively and act as a general shield for EMI emissions.
Making two separated shields (top and bottom pours) may give rise to one or more tuned antennas with the pours on each side acting as capacitor and the via interconnects as coils. The shielding effect of copper pours next to signal lines does not work as well in PSU designs because the traces are much wider and therefore "see" less of the neighbouring pour as small traces. Also, traces in copper pours act more like transmission lines than those outside the pour. Expressed transmission lines may be bad in high frequency switchers and can introduce additional poles in the regulation, causing instabilities.
Switchers at low frequencies (like a MC34063 10..100kHz) have fewer problems than high frequency (LTC* and the like at 500..2500kHz) switchers. Higher switch frequencies introduce more artifacts and are much more difficult to design with low EMI emissions. Lower frequency designs are (generally) much more forgiving.
My conclusion has always been to leave the top plane bare for PSUs, unless there is a very good reason to fill it.