I don't think you can actually measure reputation converting it into dollars (or any other currency).
Every day, people work on Stack Overflow to help their fellow programmers solving any kind of problem and coding any kind of program: let's just assume that 1 rep point is considered equal to 1$ (the value is not important at all). Then try to figure out what would this mean:
If I ask a question seeking for help, and get a bunch of upvotes because my question is well-written and has founded reasons, then I'll earn hundreds of dollars out of nothing. Would that make sense? Earning (hypothetical) money because of being unable to solve some problem? It does look pretty ridiculous.
If I answer a question and my answer gets downvoted even though I provided a reasonable answer (maybe because there's a better solution), I'll then start to lose money for my work: like paying to do my work (for which I should be paid instead).
It may happen for an answer showing minimum effort to get strongly upvoted, causing an enormous profit to the answerer, although there hasn't been any effort at all.
It also may happen for an answer showing a good amount of effort and research to get highly downvoted because of other reasons: the answerer will lose reputation (so, hypothetically, money), would this make sense? I don't think so.
Members of the community will start arguing for the most silly reasons, because money changes everything.
Bounty questions? That would become a pure massacre.
These are the most important reasons I could think of, but the list is obviously longer and longer than this.
So, basically: I don't think you could be able to approximate a (fair) monetary value for reputation points at all.