I think the way it is now, where people have to intentionally do the notification, is probably for the best. With automatic notifications, I think we'd be getting too much noise along with the signal. We'd also have the problem of getting both an automatic notification, and the questioner/answerer posting one as well. (People will do that; we all use the system without quite understanding all the various things it does, to a greater or lesser degree.)
Separately:
I think it would be difficult and error-prone to create an automated system that doesn't suck. I've answered nearly 10,000 questions on SO. Do I want a notification every time someone fixes a tag or typo or grammar in any of those questions? I do not. Jon Skeet's got me beat by more than a factor of 3. Does he want those notifications? I suspect not, but we'd have to ask him.
So then we have the "Minor edit" checkbox Oriol mentioned. But will people tick the box? Consistently? No, they won't.
So then we get into "Well, maybe only in the 24 hours since the question was asked." but then people have to understand that mechanism and force the notification when more than that much time has passed. ("Hey, why didn't Joe get the notification when I edited? He did last time.")
So then we say "Well, we can show a note above the Edit Summary box to tell them whether notifications will occur." Will they read it? Consistently? No. People don't read.
Maybe we could eventually get there, and maybe I'm wrong that it's not worth the time. But I'd rather see that development time spent on, say, making Stack Snippets (dramatically) better, creating better heuristics for preventing "my question is in another castle / your answer is in another castle," flagging and pushing previous questions that likely answer what someone is typing, and so on.