What do you spend your time on instead, and how do you support yourself? Unless there's some other definition for "real work" that still involves money but isn't some form of a job - be it self-employed, entrepreneurial, or otherwise.
Perhaps it's worth sampling the population and seeing whether outcomes match. I'll go first. I didn't do this. My parents intentionally did my cursive writing homework for me so I could read and go out and explore the countryside.
I now run eng at a prop trading firm that you'll occasionally see in the FT.
It was the arbitrariness of academic work that got to me. Real world work tends to be clearly directed at a goal, and if you acheive the goal it doesn't tend to matter much how you did it. Academic assessments (poorly designed ones, which happens to be most of them in my experience) expect you to do things exactly in a prescribed manner. Essentially 50% of what you're doing isn't actually useful learning, it's domain-specific learning where the domain is "what my professor happens to care about".