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However...
It's difficult to tell by the pictures but your acoustic guitar doesn't quite look right.
The soundboard could have bellied due to excess humidity or it could something a bit more serious. Hard to say from just one picture though.
Also worth looking inside, if all the bracing looks good it will be further confirmation, along with the action that there is no issue. You'll need a small mirror to look at the bottom of the soundboard.
The neck angle, soundboard radius is part of the normal design of the acoustic guitar, the doming strengthens the s/b - think egg / the roof of St Pauls.
All the calculations are to allow a saddle height to string action over the f/board. As long as a good playing 'action can be achieved - all's ok.
As AliGorie says, if the action is fine now and the bridge isn't already cut down as low as it will go, it's meant to be like that and everything is OK. If the bridge is already very low and the action is still too high, that's when you should be concerned.
A 'flat top' acoustic means as opposed to an archtop, which is like a violin and is deliberately highly arched, either by being carved or pressed to the shape, not that the top is exactly flat.
"Take these three items, some WD-40, a vise grip, and a roll of duct tape. Any man worth his salt can fix almost any problem with this stuff alone." - Walt Kowalski
"Just because I don't care, doesn't mean I don't understand." - Homer Simpson
Someone once told me... 'Never trust a flat top without a belly.' Meaning... if there's no belly, the guitar is probably a bit over-built - and less likely to resonate as much as a more lightly built guitar.
I guess there may be some truth in that.
I've never met Norman Blake... I think it was Blakey (from On The Buses) that told me. ;-)