I think that this is a tough question to answer. Moderators are not required to put in X hours of work or go through X amount of review queues per day.
Consider this:
What if you have a moderator that is lucky, and does not work due to some sort of wealth.
And then you have another moderator that works two shifts per day, and can only dedicate 2 hours of his time to stack exchange per night.
2 hours is not insignificant, but if our other moderator that has extra time on his hands spends 6 hours per day.
Granted this is an exaggeration, and probably not true... There will always be moderators with more time on their hands than others.
While the percentages will show exactly how much each moderator does in relation to each other, it won't show actually how much they are helping the community.
Also, flags are not the only thing moderators do. Which is another reason why the percentage of flags a moderator deals with is not a great representation of how valuable they are.
Don't get me wrong, part of what makes StackOverflow (and the entire SE network) so unique is the instant answers. If flags are taking hours to be dealt with we should look for solutions.
However... I don't think that we should make this a finger pointing kind of situation. Not only are percentages inaccurate (as I said earlier) but they are very critical.
Instead of trying to see exactly what moderator does what percentage of the work, I suggest the following:
Currently we have 19 moderators. All of which have dedicated hours and hours of time to this community.
I think we should collect some statistics looking at the following:
- Average number of flags needed to be dealt with.
and
- Average time it takes for a flag to be dealt with.
Based on this data we can decide if we have enough moderators, and in what areas we could use extra help.
Then maybe we can decide if we need new moderators!
Hope this helps!