They are a hair longer. But, the AFM lobes on the cam have a smaller base circle. This is why you can't keep the AFM cam and just drop in regular lifters when doing a delete. You'll have four cylinders running weakly enough to show up as misfires.
If using a non-AFM GM cam or specifically-made aftermarket cam, you can use the stock push rods. Many, if not most aftermarket cams modeled for performance have a smaller base circle, requiring longer push rods. The common performance cam's base circle is .050" smaller than that of the factory cam, requiring a .025" longer push rod to compensate. The factory rods are 7.380". Since most rods are made in .025" increments, a 7.4" is the standard drop-in rod. That .005" difference is negligible, especially with the rather wide acceptable preload range for the factory lifters.