There have been proposals for rewarding questions with a bounty-like system, and consensus in the answers seemed to be that "upvoting" was enough. But there recently have been complaints that the question quality is dropping on stackoverflow, and I also wondered how to encourage or reward "good questions".
I don't want to make a definite statement of whether I agree or disagree with the proposal.
(^ Edited to emphasize this sentence. Although I only mentioned points that seem to support question bounties, there are also arguments against it. See the answer by Peter Duniho for a more detailed analysis)
But would like to concur to some of the arguments given in other answers and at other locations. For example, people argued that answers for bounty questions involves hard research and work. Let me point out something with a freehand circle here:
As the number of questions increases, it also becomes increasingly hard to ask a "good" question.
Seriously, whenever you dump some programming-related question into some search engine, the first link is the appropriate answer on stackoverflow. It's nearly boring...
So there is effort necessary in order to ask a suitable question at all, and a good question, in the spirit of the site, does involve research effort. This research effort may be rewarded, and it might be appropriate to reward it with more than 5 points.
Another argument was that reputation is a measure of trustworthyness. I don't see how this can be an argument against question rewards. If someone asks a question here, the primary goal will in most cases be to receive a good answer. But if he knows how stuff works, he will do his best to encourage good answers, and he can do this by properly stating and elaborating the a question - that is, by taking the time to write a good question (which is not easy).
So, if someone asks a question in a way that helps to improve the site, then one could "trust" him to some extent.
(At least, there are certainly cases where people flooded the site with 20 poor questions, of which 10 are upvoted by the people who write answers to these poor questions. In these cases, the upvotes for the questions are rather a "reward" offered by those who are happy about finding a question that was so easy that they could answer it. I probably would not "trust" someone with 10*5 points more than someone with 1*50 points...)
There recently have been controversial discussions about the inflation of reputation, and there are certainly arguments against such a question bounty system. But I think that one should at least consider the option of rewarding good questions that stand out against the "do me my homeworks" ones.