I disagree with your initial premise:
There will be a huge difference in reps among hi-reps users and new joiners after 10 years. That difference will not encourage the new joiners to actively participate in this community, as they know they will not achieve that milestone.
When I joined this site many moons ago, I was a long way away from the most active users in terms of reputation. That didn't deter me from participating, though.
I didn't join this site to accumulate reputation. No one should. It is far too much work for that. I actually have to think—when I read questions, when I post answers, and when I read answers posted by other people. No, I'm here to learn new things and to help others. You join to become a better programmer, to sharpen your skills, to get help with your problems, and maybe to build a little bit of karma by helping others. And because the ability to teach and explain things to your fellow programmers is a valuable, marketable skill. You don't join for fake Internet points; no one really cares.
The only reason why reputation matters is because it unlocks certain privileges that enable you to fully participate. For example, first you get the ability to vote, and then to comment, and then to edit, and then to moderate. Once you get all of those privileges, reputation no longer matters (if it ever did in the first place). The truth is, it is really just an imperfect way of measuring your experience on the site, and therefore whether you can be trusted with additional privileges.
And since those privilege thresholds are fixed, it doesn't matter when you join. You still only have to earn 50 reputation to have the privilege to comment. It doesn't matter that Jon Skeet broke the reputation counter, you'll still just need 50 reputation to comment. And you'll still need just 3k reputation to edit other posts. And so on.
This, however, is a real problem:
Fact everyone has to accept is hi-rep users will not like to do janitor works for years as they will get bored of redundancy. If they stop doing janitor work, site will be a mess. The number of users will increase but site will lose its credibility.
It does get tiring. That's why we try to spread out the load. It's why the site is largely community moderated, rather than a small handful of individuals trying to do all of the dirty work. It would rapidly burn out even the most dedicated of people.
But beyond that, how else do you suggest that we deal with this problem? It is a problem that has very little to do with reputation, and everything to do with moderation. They are only linked because we trust experienced users (those with high reputation) to moderate.
The team is working on making things slightly easier for us to keep the site clean. They recently gave gold tag badge holders the ability to mark a question as a duplicate with only a single vote. This has been awesome, and I hope it is a harbinger of things to come on the moderation front. If you have any more awesome ideas like this, please feel free to propose them.
Also nowadays it is little difficult to get reputations than it is used to be earlier.
Totally wrong. There are zillions more users now than there were in the early days, and tons more questions, making it lots easier to earn reputation.
There are plenty of new users who have ticked their way up the ranks. Maybe no one will ever catch up with Jon Skeet, but that really isn't the point.
Ultimately I am looking answers for the question "How to encourage new users in future, new users discouraged/outrage when down voted."
So I guess "get over it" won't do it for you? Seriously, neither of those are appropriate reactions to a downvote. Voting works as a rating system for content here.
The only time you should get discouraged is if a majority of your contributions are being repeatedly downvoted. Then you might want to try and figure out why the community as a whole finds your contributions to be unhelpful. If some healthy self-criticism doesn't reveal the answer, perhaps ask for some direction here on Meta. Someone did that very recently, and Robert Harvey posted an extremely helpful and insightful answer.
Outrage over downvotes is just outrageous.