Shog9's answer has addressed the technical merit of your concern, explaining what actually happens. But what of the request for a different behavior?
The Stack Overflow model is an exercise in balancing egotism with altruism. IMHO, adding the feature you're requesting would be a shift in the wrong direction.
In general, where users are granted "credit" for their actions, it's done in a way that improves the site overall. Reputation points don't just reward users, they also help serve as a (very rough) indicator of that user's trustworthiness and competence. This provides an important signal to other users to help evaluate posts and (especially, since they offer a much more constrained voting paradigm) comments. It also allows users to take site-improving actions.
But reputation points aren't awarded for closing duplicates. And as Shog9 has pointed out, a flag offered by a user will be automatically accepted as "helpful", even if that user did not vote to close or gain any specific credit for closing the question. So as far as the site metrics go, the user has gotten every bit of recognition that the site has to offer them.
So what's left? Public recognition? Even if we assume that every user does in fact want their flag activity revealed (which is what you're talking about here…in and of itself, that's a potentially troubling change in SO philosophy), doing so seems little more to me than ego-stroking. I think it would set a bad precedent for the philosophical stance of the site to suggest that rewarding ego is in any way a primary goal.
I admit that doing so is an inevitable result of any system that rewards users in any way. I'm not saying we should avoid things that boost ego. Just that we should make sure that a feature on the site has some other benefit beyond that.
The best content on the site comes not from those seeking peer approval, reputation points, or other ego-driven behaviors. Rather, it's from the people who want to help and for whom "credit" is at most a secondary concern. For those people, reputation and other "rewards" come naturally anyway, and the site is better for their more outwardly-focused motivations.
status-bydesign
andbug
and addfeature-request
. We don't need lawyering on these, do we? Or do I need to go through the rigmarole of posting it separately? Because that's useful?