No.
Neck tension primarily comes from friction between resized case and the bullet, not from taper crimp. You won't be able to push the bullet in a properly resized case with .380" taper crimp. If you can push the bullet in, you have neck tension issue that requires further investigation.
I just resized a "FC" case that's been reloaded 10+ times with .011" case wall thickness with 115 gr Winchester FMJ bullet (.355") using .380" taper crimp and 1.135" OAL. I could not push the bullet in against the bench and after feeding/chambering from the magazine, OAL did not decrease to indicate good neck tension. I am using Lee carbide resizing die which resizes cases to .372" at case mouth.
Also, case walls have gotten thicker over the years where .011" was more common, these days many case walls are .012"+.
So, .355" + .012" + .012" = .379"
With jacketed/plated bullets sized .355", I use taper crimp of .376"+ but .377"-.379" will work too.
With lead bullets sized .356", I use taper crimp at .377"+ and even .380" taper crimp will fall freely in tighter KKM/Lone Wolf barrels with a "plonk". In my newer Lone Wolf barrel with quicker start of rifling/almost no leade, chamber is even tighter and .378"-.379" taper crimp is the max I can use.