Is there a reason for not doing so?
My idea is that the potential git diff will happen in package.json. I would like to treat the yarn.lock as a binary.
I don't see any reason to not treat it as so, as it is a file which is not meant to be read by humans.
I have been using it as a binary in a large team for more than one year and we didn't have any problems. And nobody who I talked to run into problems too - please comment if you have, as I am trying to implement it again in another company.
Merge conflicts can be resolved installing the packages again. Talk with your team about this topic and give it a go.
I posted this question in Yarn's issue tracker on GitHub. I got the following answer:
No it shouldn't. The file is plain text and there can be merge conflicts in the file that you may need to resolve.
https://github.com/yarnpkg/yarn/issues/1776#issuecomment-260022242