I don't think there's any doubt that the majority of working people want to get back to work, but -- from what little it's possible to tell from polling -- the majority of people of all ages would also rather wait until they were confident it was safe to do so. It's a difficult question as to how "safe" things need to be in order to return back to some semblance of normal, and it should go without saying that perfect safety is impossible anyway, so there is clearly a difficult balance to strike.
What I was, perhaps unfairly, bristling at was the suggestion that those who want to wait a while are (mostly) relatively unaffected by the loss of work. It's a bit misleading anyway, because work isn't the only way in which our lives have changed for the worse in the last months -- although I accept that, for many, losing work and the money that goes with it will be more significant than losing other freedoms. But it still seems uncharitable to assume that those who want this to go on for longer have little to lose from that. Actually it's also misleading to suggest that anyone "wants" this to continue. "Accepts that it's necessary" is a better way of putting it. Lesser of two evils, and all that. If we hadn't gone into lockdown the human death toll would almost certainly have been much worse, and it also follows from that assessment that exiting lockdown prematurely would be too damaging and too deadly to be worth the benefits.