The tool tip for downvotes reads 'This question does not show any research effort'.
Simply put, we don't care if the author already knows the answer or if they are even interested in knowing the answer. All we care about is whether they have produced a useful and answerable question.
As far as I know, downvotes are primarily for signifying whether or not a question is useful for the community as a whole, either for people visiting the site looking for answers or people on SO looking to answer questions. We are often told on meta that we are voting for the question, not the user. To me, downvoting for lack of effort seems a bit like punishing the user rather than signifying whether it's a high quality, useful post.
Why introduce an additional reason for downvoting which is imperfectly correlated with posting quality and is necessarily subjective? What's wrong with just downvoting posts that are unclear or not useful? I can imagine a scenario where a user has provided a high quality question, but not put much research effort in, which can still be very useful for the community as a whole.
I totally understand why 'not clear' is a reason for downvoting, since clarity is directly related to how useful a question is; if it's unclear, it cannot be useful. That doesn't apply for effort.
For the record, I'm not necessarily disagreeing with the premise of downvoting for lack of effort, or defending people who put no effort into posts, I'm just unsure about the real justification.