It seems that any user can edit a closed question. If a user doesn't have the rep then such an edit triggers possibly two reviews, an edit review and then, assuming the edit is approved, a reopen review.
That's a lot of work, and in my experience almost every edit by a third-party is unrelated to the close reason. So a lot of work goes into reviewing relatively inconsequential edits.
I propose that if you do not have enough rep to skip the edit review then you should not be allowed to edit any closed questions except your own.
As an alternative, you can decide to relax the rule for duplicates. A good duplicate adds value to stackoverflow.
To clarify the proposal, here is the timing of the actions I'm describing:
- Owner asks question
- Question has problems and gets closed
- Low rep user edits this closed question triggering an edit review
- Two edit reviewers approve the edit
- Because the question was closed and then was edited, question pops into the "Reopen Votes" review queue with the reason "Question was edited after it was closed. Should it be reopened?"
- Five more reviewers look over the edit and decide the question should remain closed.
As a worst case but common scenario, all of this work can be triggered by a low-rep user taking an off-topic question and improving the formatting a little bit. My proposal cuts this process off at step 3 by not allowing low-rep users to edit questions that are closed.
Edits that would not cause the question to be pushed into the reopen queue, such as those done more than 5 days after closure, would not be impacted.