My answer comes eight months late but I have something new to add, so here goes.
Rewards. Reputation (rep) is a reward. By design, earning site privileges is fun. If you are under a certain age, then you might not remember how countlessly many help forums and newsgroups had failed, collapsing in social chaos, before Stack Overflow finally discovered a formula that worked. A large part of what distinguished Stack Overflow's formula from earlier ones was in the way it handles rep.
Senior users. Admittely, over 25k rep, no more site privileges remain to be earned, and plenty of senior users over 25k continue nonetheless to answer lots of questions just because they like to contribute, but see: these senior users have earned their place in the community. These senior users enjoy the implicit respect of us who remain junior to them. These senior users have earned their stake. The stake itself—more valuable, harder earned than mere rep—has become the reward.
Social status. Few among the senior users care much about rep, but at their level, not caring becomes a sign of social status within the community.
Junior users. We more junior users are supposed to care about rep. Rep is supposed to motivate us, isn't it? That is what rep is for. Otherwise, there would be little purpose in the awarding and tracking of rep. They do not pay us in cash, after all; they pay us in rep.
Therefore, I would bring the following to the attention of the Stack Overflow team. If they want questions by new users actually answered by users like me (I do not claim that they necessarily do or should want this, but if they do), then they might consider additional measures to boost the likelihood that answers to questions asked by new users be rewarded with rep.
One small suggestion: when the new user types, "Thanks," in comments, then the system might present the new user a banner suggesting that they upvote and accept. This suggestion would probably not alone solve the problem but, combined with other suggestions, it could help.
Further ideas might occur.
ALTERNATE CONSIDERATIONS AND CONCLUDING REMARKS
Now, perhaps the issue I raise is judged not to be a problem. Perhaps the view of Stack Overflow's management is that answers to the questions of new users tend to be a waste of time. Perhaps answers to the questions of new users are so seldom of value to future visitors that management would rather that users like me politely ignore most such questions. If so, I could understand this.
However, if the foregoing is not the view of Stack Overflow's management then a substantial adjustment of incentives to answerers would seem to be in order. I for one am gradually growing wary (I did not say, weary) of answering new users' questions. I am gradually adjusting my behavior to the rewards on offer.
If management has indeed been thinking about the problem, if management agrees that it might indeed be a problem, then I should be interested to learn of countermeasures under consideration or in deployment.
Possible duplicate of <url>
, Duplicates are good; they help us collect all the canonical knowledge in one place, and the questions which are closed work as useful signposts for others who are articulating their problem statement similarly.