Yes, it's been discussed before: increasing the amount of a bounty
The idea was not popular. Which brings me to the other part of your question... What can you do when no one's paying attention to your bounty?
Wait. You're not "paying for work"; you're paying for advertising. And the longer your bounty runs, the better placement you get on the list of bountied questions. When you first offer your bounty, you're at the bottom of the list; as the days go by, your question gets closer and closer to the top.
Edit. Presumably you're not sitting on your hands; if the problem was important enough for you to offer a bounty, you're probably still searching far and wide for a solution, trying different approaches, etc... So write 'em up! If nothing else, knowing what doesn't work might save potential answerers time spent going down dead-ends themselves, leaving them more time to find a solution that does work.
Re-bounty. If your bounty expires without a solution, you can offer another, larger bounty. Since you're primarily paying for advertising, it may actually be worth your while to always start with a small bounty, as this allows you the chance at the maximum amount of exposure for the reputation you're giving up. The best part of this is that it allows you to award increasingly-large bounties for increasingly-complete answers...
I suspect that #3 is one of the reasons for folks' dislike of the previous suggestion to allow increasing bounty values; some problems are hard to crack, and folks have traditionally wanted to withhold the full bounty from anything less than a complete answer when they put a lot of rep on the line. Allowing answerers to bite off pieces and work collaboratively on solutions can be less stressful and more productive for all involved, and the current system does actually encourage this to a certain degree (albeit in a manner that is completely non-obvious to an awful lot of folks offering bounties).