There are no data that I am aware of that suggests that a 48 hour delay (or any other delay, for that matter) is optimal. The statistics at the top of the page on SO (and all other SE sites that I checked) show that the questions with bounties are a minor fraction of all questions. This suggests that removing the delay for all bounties, or for large bounties, or for bounties posted by users with at least X rep, will have little effect on the rest of the questions.
The best way to answer this question is by doing experiments to measure the positive and negative effects of varying the bounty delay. Without the data, this conversation is limited to the exchange of opinions and case studies (with limited N). Possible effects/metrics to measure:
- Quality of the bountied questions and answers: question score, answer score, top answer score, % questions with accepted answers, % questions with no answers).
- Percent questions voted to close or flagged (as off topic, as very low quality, for moderator intervention).
- Number of views per question for non-bountied questions (to measure the degree to which attention is drained from non-bountied questions to bountied ones).
FAQs:
An experiment would take a lot of work and risks introducing bugs. Why do it?
The current system uses a somewhat arbitrary delay of 48 hours for all users. Until these 2 days pass, all questions are considered equal in the sense that answering any of them, the rep per upvote/downvote and accepted answer is the same across all questions. But all questions are not created equal! Some are harder than others and would just sit there for 2 days doing nothing, because of the sheer effort required to answer them.