Having a more detailed image of reasons behind downvotes is useful. But that's just a detailed part of a much bigger image.
I always believed that part of the scope of Stack Overflow is not just about giving/receiving answers, but the learning aspect, both for people asking questions as for those answering.
Being a teacher myself I know this very well: teaching is learning. And a fundamental aspect of teaching is not only point out errors to your students and correct them, but to teach them how to avoid those errors - and learn how to teach that myself.
As answerers, many of us don't just give solutions, but also methods that allow users to not repeat mistakes by explaining the reasons behind good/best practices, not only for the specific subject of the post, but also about related aspects (syntax, implementation optimization, styling/naming conventions, etc.) and question making.
The last part is the most sensitive problem for new users.
Long time users are usually experienced enough (with the website and programming in general) to understand the reasons behind downvotes on their own; when in doubt they know they can ask for clarifications in comments, but it's often unnecessary as the question is probably already written in a way that downvoters will probably already comment about it.
To most people (beginners in both programming or SO practices), a downvote is like a bad school grade given without explanation. Most of them even take it very personally (we've all seen new users losing their temper after few questions that take immediate downvotes), and there's often the case of users that delete a downvoted answer and then just create a new one almost identical (which usually results in even more downvotes).
One of the things I teach since the very first lesson is how to deal with mistakes, and the first step is to be able to recognize them. One of the biggest problems with votes and reputation systems is that most of the times the user doesn't know the meaning behind a downvote, the reason for it and how they can improve both the question at hand and their future questions to avoid them. Even if there's often a comment about that, the amount of bad quality questions from new users is so big that even patient people get annoyed and just give up explaining in the long run.
Then, as pointed out, there's the problem that downvotes are often forgotten. I downvote, a lot, but I retract as much as possible as soon as the author edits the post in a valid way. But that doesn't happen often: there's no notification, no easy search method, and there is no easy way to find them back. And that gets even worse for niche tags, questions that get very little attention since the beginning and even less after downvotes, so, even after editing, the downvotes remain, the question gets ignored and we're back to the beginning: the user doesn't know what to do, and will probably leave the community or just ask other bad questions again and again.
There's very little point in knowing the specific reasons for which we downvote, if the target of those downvotes don't know that. And they should be able to know that before they get possibly downvoted.
As a teacher, my job is not to point out mistakes, but to teach how to avoid and deal with them in the first place, since the very first lesson. And I strongly believe that this is the main issue here: it is our responsibility to give reasons about downvotes, but our role should be to talk about programming issues, not how to ask questions; that is your responsibility, to prevent that we even downvote for those reasons.