This may damage another indirect incentive that comes as a result of the reputation limit. Reaching the limit isn't entirely a trivial task and I imagine it really only happens to:
- Quality contributors
- Rep farmers
- The occasional lucky answer ("lucky" defined as a simple answer to a simple question which happens to become very popular in the short term)
Clearly the rep farmers are very likely to cease their efforts when they reach the limit. This is arguably a good thing for the community because, even though they're providing community-approved content, the intent just isn't the same. They've done a good bit of contributing for the day, and we thank them for it, but we don't want them to go overboard and start diluting the signal with noise.
With the occasional lucky answer, the community benefits from the rep limit because a single good answer (or just popular answer) doesn't necessarily make for a quality contributor. I believe this is the most common stated intent of the rep limit. It's a mechanism to help prevent one hit wonders from becoming highly privileged users too quickly.
But what about the quality contributors? (Your example of Jon Skeet, for example.) I think the rep limit actually provides an indirect incentive for them that also benefits the community. There are a couple of ways the quality contributor can look at the situation:
- I want to continue to earn rep
- I want to continue to help people
If the latter condition is the driving factor, then the rep limit doesn't really stop them. Jon has used the term "long tail" multiple times (in a comment on the blog post to which you linked, on Twitter, etc.) in reference to where he gains much of his rep. He has well over 10,000 answers, and people stumble across them via Google all the time. At this point he's hitting the rep limit just as a matter of statistics and not even through any effort he has to put in on any given day.
So why does he continue? While I don't know Jon personally, I tend to think that the latter condition is a significant driving factor. But we can't ignore the former condition. We're human, we like to win at games, we like to get high scores. The "gamification" is indeed a major part of Stack Overflow's success. So how does the quality contributor continue to earn rep in this case?
Keep in mind that awarded bounties and accepted answers aren't affected by the rep limit. It's a limit on up-votes only. So the rep limit is sort of a way for the system to give a little nudge to the quality contributor and say, "Hey buddy, thanks for the contributions today. I really appreciate it. Since you're clearly pretty good at this, why not take a look at the bounty questions? They're a little more challenging, but they're worth it. And while you're at it, take a moment to make sure your answers weren't just drive-by helpfulness but were really well-crafted and high quality answers. They're more likely to be accepted that way."
Just my two cents.