Reputation is meant to reflect how useful the community has found a particular user's contributions over time. Reputation is largely a combination of
- One's ability to write well (good writing always wins out over bad)
- One's ability to understand the problem and the solution (skill, experience, reading comprhension)
- One's ability to answer quickly (right place, right time, knowledge on tap, rather than needing a google search)
- One's ability to spend time on the site (You can get 200 rep a day if you answer 40 questions a day reasonably well, and don't have to be an expert, great writer, or even particularly quick)
While experience is a part of it, a good writer with decent programming skills that can understand and make themselves understood quickly will beat an experienced programmer who is not as able to write well or convey technical concepts easily.
Badges are largely meant to encourage good behavior, and therefore reflect how well a user uses the site and meets the mini-goals set for them.
As you can see, the two have different goals, and exhibit difference aspects of a user's use of the site and value to the community. The two are coupled, so you will often see that high rep users have a large number of badges, and high badge users generally have a large reputation. The coupling is merely due to the fact that being a good user has a lot to do with posting good material other users find useful - so they are not orthogonal to each other, and overlap quite a bit.
Neither can be reliably used to determine which answer is the best answer, all else being equal.
If you're trying to evaluate the likelihood that a given answer is correct based solely on reputation or badges, reputation is likely a better indicator as it's closer to the "other posts have been found useful/valuable/correct by other users" than badges are.
I don't think badge count can tell you very much about answer correctness that reputation can't tell you better, since reputation is more closely tied to answer performance.
However, specific badge counts, such as nice answer, enlightened, etc, could possibly be a better measure since they measure answer performance only, and account for acceptance and speed. Still, it's not likely to be that much better than reputation alone for the majority of 5k and up users. Below that, where question reputation and editing reputation can be significant, reputation might not be as valuable as badges.