The point system makes new users "addicted", in a sense, Stack Overflow becomes like a role-playing game (RPG), you stay here, try to earn points. Points are important, they're labeled "reputation", as if they indicate your level of expertise, as if it's a testimony to your skills.
Another Stack Overflow user, jgormley, discussed a downside of this system in another post, so I'm not going to repeat his argument, but I will present another downside, which I notice in myself, and in many answers:
People make half-assed not-well-informed answers to questions just so that they get points. Even if the answer is not really what the OP is looking for, it's as if they skimmed the question and didn't really get the point.
This, of course, is a side effect of trying to get points in any way, even by gaming the system.
The problem here is that a question will get many half-assed answers, none of which truly satisfies the question. Some readers will up-vote questions, 'just because', it looks like a good answer, even if it isn't. I also suspect that newcomers might 'sympathize' with their peers, thus voting for their answers as a curiosity to help them earn points, and probably expecting others to do the same for them (This is just a hunch on my side).
Anyway, even if no one up-votes any answer, you'll still end up with a question that has 10 answers, none of which really answers the question at all. The question will drown in a sea of questions and no one will notice it again, so it never gets answered.
The proper way to fight that is to down-vote stupid half-assed answers, but that's where the other problem comes in:
The system punishes you for downvoting, as if you shouldn't do it! It also doesn't punish the poster enough to prevent him from posting a stupid answer. This happened to me once, I made a half-assed answer to a question, and it got downvoted! You know what? I didn't delete my answer, because my ego tells me "shutup dude, my answer is good!", and it got downvoted again, but who cares, -4 points won't hurt, so my ego still insisted to keeping the not-well-informed answer. Now if it was -5 or -8, then I would've probably deleted my answer, or at least gave it a bit more thought.