Maybe, or maybe I do.
Based on the responses I've gotten in this thread I've done some re-considering, but it seems like I've started on an extreme and other posters have taken the opposite extreme. Somewhere in between there must be a happy medium, which I've hinted at.
Take not working to it's logical extreme. No one *has* to do anything, there's no need to do well in school, or even a need to study, and everyone spends their entire life at leisure. Why is this reality a good thing? It would essentially be a long march towards death, and 'leisure' would in effect lose all meaning because there would be no alternative. Filling time would, in effect, become our job.
Now take working to its logical extreme. We're *always* doing obligatory work, we're under immense pressure, our life is at risk. This is also an uncomfortable reality, which is closer to what many people experience in this age.
Somewhere in the middle people are given meaningful tasks that fill their time, that give them a consistent outlet for their energies, that motivate them to improve as a person, to grow, and so on.
Even people with lots of funds usually do some kind of useful work because doing things is a part of who we are. The problem then, isn't that people don't want to work, it's that people don't necessarily want to do the work that they're doing.
I have a friend who does not need to work. When he turned 25, he was given control of his trust fund, which gave him an annual income of around $600K a year. That was 1982. He had just graduated college with a degree in business admin. He could have become a drunken wastrel, but that's really not his nature. He married a nice woman and they have a couple kids. Over the years, he has purchased several small businesses and franchises. None of them are still in existence. These days, he owns a couple of pieces of commercial real estate, which he manages. He keeps an office in one of them for his "consulting" business. He advises people who want to buy a small business.
As I said, he doesn't need to do any of this. His business ventures have all met slow lingering deaths, but he's never declared bankruptcy. He can't, because he has more than enough income to pay the debts. Why does he work so hard, when he gets so little in return?
The reason is simple. He is embarrassed to say he doesn't have a job. America does not have enough idle rich to form a distinct social class. If there were an American version of Downton Abby, it would have to be about John D. Rockefeller's family, and everyone of them would have a job. When you go to a party and meet someone new, the first information that is exchanged is "what do you do?"
Once the necessities of life have been provided(my friend had this the day he was born), there is great social pressure, especially in the US, to do something useful, if for no better reason than to demonstrate you have the ability.
On the other extreme, there are people born with nothing. They work more than one job for an income that allows barest survival. They don't have time for embarrassment. For them, the idea of less work is Utopian.