As I have progressed with my involvement with Stack Overflow more and more of my effort is spent gardening as opposed to answering questions. Everyone once in a while I'll see something I know the answer to, but I spend way more time casting close votes, burning through the review queue, and trying to help people ask better questions.
Several high rep users have indicated that the days of "low hanging fruit" and "easy rep" questions are over. As on and off member for 3 years I agree with this statement. Most of the commonly asked questions have been asked. Most of the new posts that can be considered questions at all are duplicates or variants of those questions. Not to be misunderstood this is a good thing its an indication that the site is moving towards its stated goal, but it does change a lot of the dynamics of participation.
From what I understand reputation indicates your SO standing as judged by your peers, but only in respect to the answers you provide. The current system requires this reputation to be awarded moderating privileges. To more effectively do the activities that so desperately need done on this site a user needs these moderating privileges. This means the only way to be a effective moderator is to answer lots of questions. This is the rub Stack Overflow seems to be approaching a post answering world. What happens when stack overflow does what it set out to do and everything is answered?
With that said my question is, if reputation is an indicator of your involvement and answering questions is becoming less important as the library becomes more comprehensive why does answering questions remain the primary vehicle for gaining reputation?
Edit
I think there was some misunderstanding regarding the question above. I'd like to clarify. I believe the reputation system as it stands provides perverse incentive for low quality answers . Additionally it encourages upvoting of bad questions to get traction/visibility for those answers. This applies to even to folks who's ultimate goal is to do the right thing. I haven't accepted an answer yet because most of the answers are discussion, but no one(as of the date of this edit) has directly answered my question which is:
What is the rationale for this system?
and more specifically:
Why leaving it that way is better than any proposed alternative?