I often see highly upvoted basic questions (and answers to them), like Create a dictionary with list comprehension in Python.
While I do agree that they are valuable to the community (and thus shall be further upvoted), I have a feeling they are making it hard to catch up (in terms of reputation) with their authors by new users.
My impression is that most of the easiest (and common) questions has already been asked. It is hard for new users to ask/answer equally popular questions, thus making them handicapped in terms of reputation gain, as old users benefit from a constant reputation income due to these basic Q&As they have answered.
May we have a policy reducing reputation gain for each new upvote depending on the time since Q/A posting or its score? For example to reduce reputation gain on upvote of a Q/A by 1 point for every 100 upvotes (or every year since posting) for that paricular Q/A (as long as the gain is greater than 1).
The issue of "old users advantage" has been raised before: Advantage to Old Users, Are reputation points working as intended? but the only solution proposed (but "just cope with it") I have found was: Reputation limit per question?
[EDIT]
As Makato mentioned - we shall focus on creating good questions and exceptional answers. The current reputation policy rather promotes focus on popular questions instead. An upvote to an average answer is worth as many as for exceptional one. However, average answer to a popular question receives much more upvotes than exceptional one on much less specific topic.