I disagree with this for a number of reasons.
- It takes the focus away from the question
- It's not an accurate metric
- It encourages users to award bounties to bad answers to maintain their "award rate"
- It's a vicious cycle
It takes the focus away from the question
StackOverflow is (and hopefully always will be) a Question and Answer site, dedicated to compiling and maintaining a collection of high quality questions and their answers. Who provides those questions and answers is irrelevant - as long as they're high quality.
By displaying a "bounty award rate" on either the question or on the user's profile we do nothing to further that goal. It says "you don't deserve our time because you haven't awarded enough of your bounties, so we're going to ignore your questions until you fix it" (see point 4). That is to say, it focuses the attention of the would-be answerers onto the asker instead of the question.
It's not an accurate metric
A "bounty award rate" would be a flawed metric (but that wouldn't stop the above mentality from developing). It's just a statistic with no contextual information behind it. What if the reason that someone didn't award a bounty to an answer was because they didn't feel it answered their question to their satisfaction? Perhaps no answers were even posted during the bounty period (Such as happened with this question)? There are plenty of reasons why a bounty might not be manually awarded. Users shouldn't be penalised for not manually awarding bounties when it's not appropriate to do so, which leads me on to...
It encourages users to award bounties to bad answers
Say this "bounty award rate" became a reality and I post a bounty on one of my questions. After the bounty period is up, there's only one answer on my question, and it's a bad answer. What do I do? I don't want to award the bounty to a bad answer, because that sends the wrong signals to the community. It says I found that answer useful when I didn't, and potentially opens up a whole other can of worms when the recipient starts badgering for an accept mark, just because it was "good enough to get the bounty".
But equally, I don't want to get punished for not awarding it, because if I don't then people may pass over my bountied questions in the future as a result. Some people given this situation will award a bounty to a crap answer just to maintain their award rate, which would be a Bad Thing.
It's a vicious cycle
If you ever got caught out by this it would be very difficult to get out of it. You can't post a bounty on one of your questions to up your accept rate, because everyone's ignoring your question, so it gets no answers. So you have nobody to award the bounty to - making your award rate even worse.
The only way out of that would be to offer bounties on questions that already have satisfactory/good answers and then award them as soon as you could to get your award rate up. And let's face it, a fair number of people would rather just create a new account and start with a clean award rate than try and fix a bad one.
Related Reading
Showing the accept rate discourages asking hard questions?
Are people less tolerant of questions from users with a low accept rate?
Is it appropriate to comment on people's accept rate?
Let's stop displaying a user's accept rate (Probably the most important one)
[100]
badge under "received bounties" and next to the answer itself, is significantly more impressive than the two-digit, not-a-multiple-of-10[50]
. (Yes, I'm looking for a job :)