Goal: Prevent down-voted questions from triggering a close before the user has the ability to review/improve/comment/flag.
First, down votes and close votes do not have any mechanical effect on each other; members cast these two types of votes independently of each other. There exist open questions with negative scores, and closed questions with scores in the double or triple digits.
Second, closing does not prevent the asker from doing any of those things; it only prevents answers from being posted.
Goal: Provide a better user experience for the question/comment/answer/flagging process
This is very broad goal, though not a bad one.
Goal: Increase both staff and user productivity
Concern: Staff productivity decreases due to having to review the question
The staff, as far as I'm aware, has not been involved in your question. They do have moderator powers and do use them, but by and large, regular users are responsible for closing questions. The Elected Moderators have special abilities but are not on the staff. A moderator, NullUserException♦ reopened your question, presumably after you flagged it to ask for such.
Goal: Reduce server load
Concern: More server resources used due to the increase in question activity
I'm not sure why you think this is an issue. The basic functions of the site are causing technical problems? If that's so, StackExchange has much bigger problems than worrying about this one little kerfluffle.
Goal: Encourage users to ask questions
Stack Overflow has, almost literally, no end of people wanting to ask questions. Thousands of questions are posted every day -- almost too many to handle. We do all that we can to find the good ones and provide good answers.
Goal: Prevent users from forcing a question to be closed before it is flagged as uncontructive [sic]
Again, flagging and close voting are not directly connected. Often a user who does not have the close vote privilege will, believing a post to need closing, flag it. Flags are viewable by moderators and by users with at least 10k rep. Either of them can review the post* and act appropriately. Even when a post is flagged, non-moderators still cast votes to close. Only moderators have the power to close a question on their own.
The purpose of a flag is to allow a user who thinks that something is wrong but can't take action to bring that something to the attention of a user who can take action.
Concern: Auto-closing questions due to down-vote can have a negative impact on both users and staff
Again again, questions are not "auto-closed" due to downvotes. Further, your question has received only one downvote (which wasn't cast by a user -- see next item). You'll have to be much more specific about the "negative impact", especially on how it affects the staff.
Concern: User's reputation can inaccurately be affected
I'm not sure in what sense you mean "inaccurate". Your reputation changes in response to votes. Questions closed for certain reasons do incur an auto downvote, but that's not inaccuracy.
Concern: The user is forced to use Moderator Flag to report unconstructive comment
You're not "forced" to do anything. The comment has no direct relationship to any other activity on your post. If you find the comment problematic, then you may flag it to help clean up the site. Your flags are replenished at the end of every day.
Concern: User productivity decreases due to time it takes to request to re-open
I assume that you mean yourself, the asker, in "user productivity" here. Frankly, when you post a question that isn't suitable for the site, you're "decreasing productivity" for everyone else who has to read it and take action. If some of your time is wasted in return, well...
Concern: The user's effort into a question isn't taken into consideration
There's no feasible way to measure the effort put into the question except by reading the question as posted. If you've put sufficient effort into the post, then it should be a specific, (reasonably) well-composed, and well-researched question that others will be happy to answer.
Concern: Users not given enough time to review comments and take action
When a comment or answer is posted, you're notified the very next time you load a page, anywhere on the SE network. You can react almost in real time. I don't understand this concern at all.
I've directly addressed your bullet points; they are generally founded in misunderstanding. Please poke around on Meta. I think that you will find reasonable explanations for most of the behavior you see on Stack Overflow. If you find something that still seems wrong to you, then bring it here, but (just as on SO proper) only after doing your research.
*Although only a moderator can dismiss the flag.