Users with less than 15 reputation are not likely to know what types of questions are or are not suitable for Stack Overflow, and thus a relatively high percentage of their flags would be noise rather than signal.
Granted, it's not a perfect heuristic, and pretty much anyone can tell that a question about gardening is off-topic, but these blatantly off-topic questions don't tend to hang around very long anyway, even without flags from users with less than 15 reputation, since we have plenty of users with sufficient reputation around to raise such flags.
I am sympathetic to the idea of allowing anyone—including anonymous users— to raise custom flags for moderator attention (i.e., flags where you have to type out an explanation in a textbox giving your reason, and flags that are handled only by diamond moderators, in contrast to flags that end up in the review queues), but even that entails serious concerns about the signal-to-noise ratio.
Do you have a specific reason why you think that the reputation requirement for flagging should be lifted? It's important to understand that, on Stack Overflow, a reputation limit of 15 is considered to be an extremely low bar. That's fewer than 2 upvotes, which can be accomplished with a single great post or two mediocre posts. It would represent maybe an hour or two worth of engagement with the site. If you haven't yet or aren't willing to put in that level of engagement, why would you be interested in flagging? And why would we expect to be able to trust your flags?