This is a backwards view. The economy and financial systems actively and
VERY STRONGLY encourage us to spend as much time as possible making money.
This can be shown in absolute clarity: we are paid to work and not paid to not work.
You are forced to work, because you have expenses that you must pay: food, shelter, healthcare. If you do not work, you die.
You buy stuff to try to maximise your enjoyment in each unit of time, or to maximise your time: dishwashers to do the dishes, air fryers to cook food quicker. An apartment closer to work. A nanny, a cleaner, an accountant.
Some people use that extra time to... do more work. And because they do, the economy rewards them; inflation and expenses rise, and now everyone else needs to spend more time working too.
The exception to this is that it's possible to hit a threshold where your projected wealth is greater than your projected expenses for the rest of your life, and this allows you to work less. This threshold is unreachable for the vast majority of people in the world, and even the US, at least until the few last years of their lifes.