Your post hits on a very real imbalance on Stack Overflow: curating content, which maintains the quality of this site, isn't rewarded well in comparison to creating that content.
Before I address your questions directly, I want to acknowledge this "balance", because it's really, really important for Stack Overflow as a whole (and frankly, for most platforms). Specifically, I mean: the more incentive you put on a given (positive) thing, the more you also make that thing an abuse vector.
In other words, lets say we started rewarding, for example, 10 reputation points (1 upvote's worth) for each time you flag/ vote to close a question which goes on to be closed. It's pretty easy to see that this could lead to abuse if not implemented correctly; I could build a bot that uses its 10 daily flags on 10 random new questions a day, and since closure-flags rarely (never?) get "declined", my bot could foreseeably earn some very quick reputation with nearly no repercussions.
Would one bot cause problems? Not really, but if you scale that effect up, it very well could cause problems. We're in pretty bad shape if a large group of users suddenly started flagging as poorly as they wrote their first posts...
All that to say– any solutions put forth towards the specific balance problem here on Stack Overflow need to take this concept into account, because it's crucial to the overall health of the platform, and a major misstep could genuinely damage or destroy the community in a very real, non-sensationalist way.
The best solutions to these problems will be the right balance between minimizing abuse and encouraging good behavior.
Onto the real questions!
Why do we reward users for answering bad questions?
I think the answer to this is that Stack Exchange has taken the stance that content creation should take precedence over content curation. The opening paragraph of the site tour says "we're working together to build a library of detailed answers to every question about programming", and the call to action at the end of the tour is to "Find a question to answer, or ask your own".
I'm not sure I even disagree with this stance; the curation part of Stack can only occur when we have people around to ask and to answer and otherwise generate said content to curate.
A side effect of this stance, however, is that by rewarding and emphasizing content creation over curation, there will almost inevitably be an emphasis on answering rather than closing or flagging, even when a question is garbage.
Would it be a good idea to incentivize downvotes and flags that are deemed to be helpful using reputation? Or to make earning downvoting and close vote privileges easier?
There has been much discussion in the past about how to get people to downvote more, and this answer by @Eevee (to a different discussion) does a great job covering the shortcomings of what we currently award rep for. I do think that reputation rewards need to be adjusted to better incentivize curation tasks; it's a major miss in my eyes that review tasks, for example, are so poorly rewarded.
For downvotes, I think the most obvious and justified change would be to remove the 1 point penalty for downvoting answers. Obviously that serves to guard against infinite, unwarranted downvotes, but given that downvotes remain incredibly underutilized overall, I'd be really interested to see if that would become a real problem. It's frankly dumb that you can unlock the downvote privilege at 125 rep, and then promptly lose it again by using it on answers... Experimentation and caution on Stack Exchange's part would definitely be warranted here, but I think this would be a net-positive change to make.
For flags, I'm more on the fence. It's definitely a curation tool, and helpful flags are definitely a Good Thing™; it just feels wrong to me to reward flags that aren't quality-related.
For example, it would be a pretty nasty side effect if rewarding all helpful flags encouraged witch hunts for users with borderline content in posts (especially on other network sites, where discussion is about much less clean-cut content than programming concepts). I think rewarding closures, especially duplicate closures, could be very beneficial, but flags as a whole sound dicier.
Something you didn't suggest, but which I would love to see in the conversation, is reputation rewards for reviews. This would also have to be implemented with extreme caution; the audit system was created specifically to combat "robo-reviewers" that review sloppily and quickly in the pursuit of review badges. If actual reputation was thrown into the mix, this could bring an even worse version of the same effect. It's possible that we'd be able to find a number that avoided these issues, but which was still something... I'd really like to see this get talked about more in-depth at some point. The discussion so far is pretty uninspiring, and is fairly dated at this point.