Closure indicates that there's a problem with the question that must be fixed before bad answers start rolling in, like asking for a recommendation, or just being incomprehensible.
Downvotes indicate that there's a problem with the question that doesn't merit immediate closure, like a question that can be answered, but the question itself is poorly researched or poorly phrased.
A while ago (and you were probably around for this), we had the "lacks minimal understanding" close reason. Thankfully that was removed, and the reason for that was simple:
##Unclear what you know == Unclear what you're asking
Unclear what you know == Unclear what you're asking
I was discussing the results here with Anna, noting in the process how this close reason could be described as "unclear if it's too broad", and she made a rather insightful observation: we're still talking about questions that are Unclear What You're Asking - we just have some fairly unhelpful guidance attached to that close reason.
So let's fix that.
There were a handful of people who interpreted "minimal understanding" as a euphemism for "visible effort" or even "a wall of code". That was never the intent, as it's never been something I've observed as a widespread implicit requirement on Stack Overflow: a clearly-written, reasonably-scoped, answerable programming question should strive to include as much information as necessary and no more; doing otherwise is a much more frequent source of frustration.
If someone asks a question that is otherwise on-topic but not an ideal question, then ideally it should just be downvoted. Closure sends the wrong signal in that they think that it can be fixed, when in reality it's just going to fade into the background of noise.