I'm not sure what the original idea behind community wiki was, but as it is now it has very little to do with the wiki aspect and a lot to do with reputation.
I suggest that community-wiki be renamed to something like "rep independent", and that it shouldn't have anything to do with who can edit the post.
Having done that, there should be a "reborn" concept of wiki questions/answers, for specific things that make more sense as wiki. Maybe even allow the original author to gain points from the post for a limited period.
I think there are some deeper issues with the concept of wiki in a Q&A site, that are not even being discussed because the reputation stuff is such a distraction.
I'm not sure there is a specific "problem". It's more an issue of muddled concepts. While you convinced me that it makes sense for the high-participation questions to be wiki, there are other situations where wiki is appropriate. Right now, the "wiki" label on a question seems to mark it as subjective, fun and lightweight, which makes me not want to use it on professional, esoteric subjects. Maybe it's just me.
What happened for me was I wanted to start a wiki that reviews all the different ways to represent date/time values in Python, their relative strengths/weaknesses, and how to convert between all of them. But I didn't know how to start a wiki. Do I collect all the answers into the question like this, or do I write a short question and make the answer the actual wiki like this? I went into meta SO wanting to ask this question, but when I searched for other discussions tagged as community-wiki I noticed all the discussion was about the rep aspects.
This question, for example, should really be a wiki. But right now, saying "this should be wiki" has the faint odor of an accusation. I'd like to see that change.