Noone wants a identical turn-off and turn-on thresholds of 90 V. To prevent frequent turn-on/off, there must be an effective hysteresis. According to design equations, it's about 18% which seems reasonable at first sight.
Did you notice that turn-on threshold is based on peak AC voltage and turn-off threshold on average? Because mains voltage can be distorted, there must be a margin to assure a positive effective threshold, probably one reason why it's designed as is.
If you want the SMPS to turn on at exactly 90V, you get a turn-off threshold of 74 V. What's the problem with it?