I agree that awarding significant reputation would be a great way to encourage checking for duplicates.
However, reading answers to similar (but not duplicate) questions, this approach is not without practical problems:
- Finding duplicates is not easy. I had a very similar idea to yours in June 2014 (about a month after you posted this), and after spending 10-15 minutes plowing through meta.so, couldn't find any questions that raised it. So, I posted almost exactly the same question, and within 10 minutes had several duplicate flags and ended up running away with my tail between my legs.
- Flagging duplicates causes work for moderators. See Should we reward helpful flags?, which, funnily, is also flagged as a duplicate.
- Correctly identifying something as a duplicate should also require feedback from the OP before the question is closed. The OP really should get the chance to say that yes, that other question (which they'd never seen) answers their problem as well. At the moment, close votes are one sided, although they can be reversed if the OP can make their case.
So, maybe the real question is.. "how do we redesign and streamline the de-duplication process in such a way that 1) the OP can accept the decisions, 2) those that go out and do the leg work of finding duplicates are rewarded, and 3) that requires minimal moderator input"?
The system rewards many other behaviors
-- Yes, but not with reputation. Suggested edits are the sole exception.