Jeff Atwood, one of the site's founders, asked the question Should the weight of downvotes be increased?:
When we started Stack Overflow, we wanted to make sure that downvotes were more of a visual and psychological motivator than a punitive action.
and in his accepted self-answer, declining his own feature request on the grounds that:
Downvotes were always essentially cosmetic, with an extremely minor effect on reputation.
Voting is, first and foremost, a content rating system.
There are two consequences:
- A downvote is not so much punishment, but a signal to other users that the post is not worth looking at.
- Stack Overflow is largely moderated by the community (not just by diamond moderators and staff, who only get involved in exceptional cases). Community moderation depends on a system of earned privileges, which are in turn based on reputation. Too much of a reputation penalty would decrease the number of users capable of moderating (this would have obviously been more of a concern in Stack Overflow's earlier days, but is still true on smaller Stack Exchange sites).