Content-free "your answer is bad and you should feel bad" comments are not helpful, but we have comment flags for them already.
In contrast, it is helpful and even important to warn new users that their answers might be wasting their time or even hurting their reputation.
There are several ways a new user can be punished for answering a bad question, and most are not at all obvious:
They might be wasting their time.
Especially bad questions can be
deleted by the Community,
taking their answers with them.
Posting an answer prevents this in many cases, but not all.
(The question's author might also never accept or upvote any answers, but I think even a new user could foresee that outcome.)
They might have to waste even more time.
Two related and common forms of bad question are the "chameleon question", which seems clear but changes its meaning later, and the "Heisenquestion", which just trades one ambiguous representation for another.
Answers, even good ones, to the first or most obvious interpretation might become nonsensical later.
The author then has to to either flag the question for moderator attention
(if they are aware of that option),
or update their own post to match.
Otherwise, their helpful and informative answer to Question 1-A will collect
(legitimate)
downvotes for failing to answer Question 42i-ReindeerFlotilla.
They might be downvoted.
Discussed in
"Should one downvote answers to off-topic questions?"
(summary: "yes").
Update:
And contradicted in
"Is it okay to downvote answers to bad questions?"
(summary: "no").
New users are generally told that they should start gaining reputation by answering questions, but they can lose reputation for decent-enough answers to questions that are duplicates or unclear.
A new user is obviously less likely to spot a duplicate.
He or she is probably less likely to spot a
help vampire,
too.
A new programmer is less likely to spot an under-defined question...
If he or she only knows one possible interpretation, then obviously the question is fully-specified and suitable for answering.
I think these are all things a new user should know, but is unlikely to learn on their own.
A comment is a more gentle teacher
(and maybe even more effective)
than a downvote or a deletion.