The short answer here is that you don't even get access to the full set of moderation privileges until you hit 20K.
So from a practical standpoint, it's really helpful to have had 20K prior to being elected - you've already had the opportunity to make some of the hard decisions that moderators will face every day. Sure, review gives folks with much lower reputation a taste of this, but that's sorta like riding a bike down a paved trail with training wheels - you get a feel for what it's like, but there's still a lot to learn before you're going to be able to tear off down hill through the brush without falling on your face.
But there's more to it than that...
Skinned
Let's have a look at what the expected duties of a moderator are here:
As a moderator, your actions now represent the community, so you will be held to a higher standard of behavior. You are an ambassador of trust, with the same sorts of rights that the official development team and community coordinators have.
Your goal is to guide the community with gentle — but firm — intervention. Respect your fellow community members at all times; demonstrate fairness and impartiality in your actions.
Whenever possible, try to leave frequent comments on posts where you’ve taken (or considered taking) a moderator action, explaining the reasoning. This is important so that community members can learn the norms of the community and the moderation policies.
Keep the site reasonably on topic by closing, migrating, or removing blatantly off-topic questions.
Regularly check for flagged posts, and decide if further action is warranted.
In the case of serious disputes, communicate directly with users via email to help mediate and resolve those disputes.
-- A Theory of Moderation
Notice how the majority of those duties involve communicating with other people? This is actually primary reason we need elected moderators: lots of other people can perform the editorial duties on the site, but it takes a special set of skills to calm troubled waters, enforce policies, and make hard decisions involving passionate, strong-willed people without making a complete mess of it all. And one of the best ways to learn that is... By teaching others.
It also requires a hefty amount of mutual trust.
Consider for a moment what would happen if we just hired people to moderate instead of going through all this election rigmarole. If all the moderators on Stack Overflow were 1-rep users that we'd trained to handle flags. How much faith would you be willing to put into a moderator's decision if they deleted an answer you'd written, or closed a question you wanted to answer, or contacted you privately about the language you'd been using in comments?
None. Zero faiths. You'd think they were a wage-slave who didn't care one bit for the goals of the site or the people who've worked to build it, and... You'd have every reason to think that: you've contributed hundreds of answers that help other people, while they've contributed nothing. Even if they had the best of intentions, they have no skin in the game - they wouldn't know what it feels like to spend time trying to help someone only for them to insult your efforts, they wouldn't have felt the sting of putting care and effort into a post only to see it deleted.
20K is a lot of skin in the game. They're not just moderating your site, your actions, they're moderating our site, and every action they take is a mirror onto themselves.
Now... 20K isn't a hard requirement, and certainly isn't a guarantee of any sort of behavior. We've had plenty of good moderators who got elected with less, and a few who weren't very effective with much, much more. But it's certainly not meaningless, and speaks to a candidate's ability and willingness to help others - which is what we're electing them to do.