tl;dr: If you upvote an anwer, it basically means that the question is worth answering, and if the question is worth answering, why don't you vote up for?
Long version: Ok I was really going to make a duplicate of Why does it seem so hard to accumulate upvotes on Stack Overflow? because hey, it really sucks not being able to comment anywhere before getting 50 rep and most people don't easily give upvote to newcomers (see my profile: 15 questions and hardly 4 total upvotes). But I am not here to complain about my personal case, but rather try to understand a little more the mechanics of this whole "vote questions up" thing:
I think the following question will be a good illustration to my point (didn't take part in it so can't be biased if you wondered): How to include another XHTML in XHTML using JSF 2.0 Facelets?
Here we can see a well formed question with a very good answer. The question got 80 upvotes while the answer got 170. When I see that I am wondering what the 90 people who voted for the answer but not for the question were thinking.
I mean, I can understand that in some cases there can be a very good answer to a bad question, which explains why there would be such a gap. But currently the moderation team is very active and most poor questions are closed right away. And in this particular case I feel like the question is clear and short and not too specific, and since it called for a very interesting answer, it is clearly under-voted.
My opinion is that if we are logical, non closed questions should statistically get at least as much upvotes as their top upvoted answer because if you are upvoting an answer,it basically means that the question is worth answering, and if the question is worth answering, why don't you vote up for?
PS: I am a non native english speaker, feel free to edit & reformulate even drastically.