I looked at the number of newly created, non-deleted, non-closed questions and answers per month split by score (negative, zero, positive). (SEDE query)
It looks like this:
The system automatically deletes abandoned questions older than 365 days with score <0 and no answers. I simulated this effect for 2019 by inspecting the jump in numbers of zero scored questions (red ellipse in figure above) and reduced the number of zero scored questions for 2019 by 33k for every month (the approximate number of questions that would get deleted automatically).
Then I can plot the number of total new questions and answers over time as well as splitting them into negative, zero and positive scores.
The overall behavior is that the number of questions and answers peaked at the beginning of 2014 and are slowly declining since then. Further I calculated some ratios. They look like
It seems that the ratio of answers to question roughly stays constant, in particular when only looking at answers and questions with positive scores. That means that the number of questions and answers both go down equally.
However there is a pronounced, steady downward trend in the portion of questions that have a positive score compared to all questions (80 % in 2010, 50% in 2015, 40% in 2018 of all questions have a positive score) and the same trend is visible for answers (80% in 2010, 60% in 2014, 50% in 2019 of all answers had a positive score). The two lower graphs of the last figure look remarkably similar, maybe there is a common cause of it, affecting questions and answers equally.
The question is why these fractions of positively received new questions or answers decreased steadily over the years?
It could be that the general interest in voting on questions and answers has decreased or it could be that the quality of questions and answers alike have decreased. Or it could be that questions and answers are more specific nowadays reducing the number of visitors.
It could also be that in the future some old questions and answer get more votes or get closed altering these graphs retroactively, but these effects usually are mostly concentrated in the first weeks of the life of a question or answer. But the trend is stable over 10 years, so I rather don't think that future voting and actions play a role here.
So what is a likely reason and can it backed up by statistics maybe?
I searched on meta with search terms "decrease question answer rate" but only found Data science time! December 2018 and answer voting and that only looks at a short time period in 2018.