Productivity gains have all gone to the bosses. People are expected to do the work the 2 or 3 people would have done in the past. We could be getting on for 6 hours a day and a four day work week. But no, billionaires gotta buy another island somewhere.
Why shouldn't people have enough to live decently for doing the bare minimum? You cannot use a term like "minimum" and claim it is "just lazy." It is literally enough by definition.
Laziness is indistinguishable from avolition a symptom of depression. Laziness, and its predecessor sloth are just terms of abuse used by the ownership class to admonish the working class.
No one wants to work in a toxic work environment, and the only reason we tolerate them, and workplace bullying is through extortion, because we have to, to eat.
But 2020 lockdown furlough and the great resignation that followed demonstrates to us that people aren't lazy at all, and will turn to other ways to be productive when given half a chance. But bosses really like to enjoy their place in dominance hierarchy, and can't actually be bothered to manage their companies -- we see very little exercise of management, that is getting to know and understand the workforce and regard them in a way to maximize productivity -- instead we see bosses deliberately choosing to engage in abusive and self-indulgent behavior, or enact policy that only deteriorates productivity, as we've seen with the return-to-work mandates. (Studies have shown people who work from home are as productive or even more so on average.)
So no. Laziness is not a thing. If someone can couch-potato for two weeks and not get cabin fever, then they're dealing with mental health issues, possibly exacerbated by a mean boss and a shitty work environment.
You're simply out of touch then. Everybody has a right to decent livable wages. It shouldn't be that people have to almost give themselves mental illness to survive.
Yes, because the most important thing in life is to have nice shit and money.
Also, the fact is that people are more productive when they have better work/life balance, as we can see with the high productivity numbers in Europe vs the abysmal productivity in the US and China. If people are paid for their productivity, as you're implying, people working 6 hour days should actually be making the same as someone working 8 hour days, assuming an efficient free market.