Because users could earn real money, they are more motivated to give
good answers.
Thats an extrinsic motivation. The problem with that is that they aren't as strong as intrinsic motivations, like helping people or contributing to great QA, and they tend to replace and diminish intrinsic motivations.
A few words from one of the founders of this website on that:
One big problem is that it replaces intrinsic motivation with
extrinsic motivation.
Intrinsic motivation is your own, natural desire to do things well.
People usually start out with a lot of intrinsic motivation. They want
to do a good job. They want to help people understand that it’s in
their best interest to keep paying AOL $24 a month. They want to write
less-buggy code.
Extrinsic motivation is a motivation that comes from outside, like
when you’re paid to achieve something specific. (source)
The point behind this is that right now, barring some meaningless(*) internet points, the primary form of motivation for answerers to contribute is to solve people's problems, help each other and create a great and well curated source of knowledge.
If you bring money into the mix, you'll get a lot of people who will optimize for money, e.G answer in such a way to maximize their "income" from the site, leading to some super undesirable side effects that could be unrivaled in their potency and vileness (Like people cheap shotting each other when competing for donations, or dishonest answer practices, etc.).
We get these problems now, when our only extrinsic motivation factor is rep. Imagine how much more intense they'll get when we replace worthless internet points(*) with actual money.
We already had highly recieved meta discussions about how StackOverflow already has too much extrinsic motivation (fast rep) and I'm not sure anyone would argue that adding another, much much stronger source of that is going to go over well with our model.
*I know some people like reputation a lot, but it's by a long shot not as strong a factor as actual money would be.