Now, let's say that the user wants to increase the bounty to 400 but don't want to wait until the current bounty expires.
Why not just wait?
If it's not about the "ASAP", as you suggest, then you're better off just waiting and starting a second bounty for the higher amount.
That way, you get twice the amount of exposure for the same "cost" in reputation.
Furthermore, this whole request makes a number of assumptions about the purpose of bounties and the motivations of answerers that I believe are fundamentally inaccurate.
In particular, it assumes that there exists people who know the answer to your question and could post it, but are simply choosing not to do so because you haven't offered them enough of an incentive yet. I've yet to come across such a person, and I'm pretty convinced that they do not exist.
The purpose of a bounty is to get your question "featured"—to increase the chances of the right pair of eyeballs seeing it. This happens just as adequately when the bounty is 50 points as when the bounty is 500 points. The only reason bounty amounts increase is because additional exposure time costs you more. The first round of exposure costs you 50 points, the second round of exposure costs you 100 points, and so on.
Your feature request assumes there is a person who finds your question and knows the answer, but says to themselves, "Ah, but the bounty is only 100! Not worth my time to answer yet; I'll wait until they up that sucker to 500." I just don't think this person is out there, and if they are, I'm not sure that I want to encourage their involvement with this site to any greater extent.