I disagree strongly. Users shouldn't have to choose between trying to help people and trying to maintain the site. Yes, reputation is mostly meaningless but it serves as motivation and it does impact the amount of effort people are willing to spend on answers.
Sometimes people aren't 100% clear on the actual scope of the site when they vote, and a corresponding Meta discussion shows them the error of their ways. And sometimes, you might think it's a duplicate, but it turns out it really isn't. But because you can vote well before any discussion happens (and indeed, most discussion doesn't happen until someone votes to close), this means that it isn't until post-voting that one might realize the vote is wrong. Basically, votes to close can often be used as a discussion starter, to get out an initial opinion to the community moderators.
Being able to vote before discussion is important, that's why it's a voting system in the first place. It lets harmful content get shut down without needing to deliberate on each incident. But it's very common for people to misperceive how a question is, and vote to close it. These kind of people shouldn't be disincented from answering a question just because of initially mistaken thought done out of good intentions. It's antithetical to our goals as a site.
And sometimes, the closer isn't wrong. The question could be extremely unclear, difficult to tell what is being asked. We close these questions, prompt the author to revise it, and later on we return to find a real question. Is it really wise to bar those 5 closers from earning reputation when they return to answer this transformed question?