If I were a moderator, I would not want to have the power you are proposing.
The reason is that I don't rely on other people's opinion to put my stamp of approval on something, unless I have grounds to trust them. What grounds would I have to trust that the user who left a comment saying "Thanks! It completely solved my problem!" is really correct? (And no, a high reputation is not enough. My experience on SO proves it.) As Martijn Pieters said, the user could have just been polite. Or the user could have jumped the gun, which happens often enough to be of concern. So is the moderator supposed to independently verify results before adding an acceptance mark? In some cases, that's no possible. In other cases, that's too much work. And then you'd have folks bugging moderators to flip the acceptance mark. As if they have nothing else to do...
What do you do then? Martijn Pieters suggested a gentle reminder. I agree. I usually put it something like this:
It looks like this answer solved your problem. The best way to thank someone on SO who solved your problem is to accept and upvote their answer. Doing this benefits everyone: the person who helped you, the community, and you. The person who helped will get reputation. The community will know that the proposed solution was useful. The acceptance mark will also indicate that your problem is solved. You will appear to others as a good member of this community, besides getting +2 rep.
(If it is my answer, I'll probably open with "Glad to help!".)
Note that I put a comment like the above only if there is an indication from the OP that the answer solved the problem. I don't badger the OP, ever: I put the reminder once. I use such reminder for any answer that needs it, not just mine.
Glad to have been of help! Feel free to [accept my answer](http://meta.stackexchange.com/questions/5234/how-does-accepting-an-answer-work) if you feel it was useful to you. :-)
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